Edgar: doublets, bifrasismos, difrasismos
idiez at MAC.COM
idiez at MAC.COM
Fri Sep 3 14:31:20 UTC 2004
Anthony,
The only problem is that in accordance with Mesoamerican sacred
landscape, indigenous people prefered living in marshy areas and
ravines which were prone to flooding. And they prefered living at the
foot of the sacred hill (which should have caves with springs running
out of them), not on top of it. The sacred hill itself can be thought
of as a womb or water filled gourd, representing the primordial lake in
which humanity gestated. Further, this whole mountain/aquatic system
was situated normally within large natural depression, horseshoe-shaped
valley or rinconada. Stephanie knows all this and more, and I'm sure
she will have quite a few things to say on the topic.
John
John Sullivan, Ph.D.
Profesor de lengua y cultura nahua
Unidad Académica de Idiomas
Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas
Director
Instituto de Docencia e Investigación Etnológica de Zacatecas, A.C.
Tacuba 152, int. 47
Centro Histórico
Zacatecas, Zac. 98000
México
Oficina: +52 (492) 925-3415
Fax: +52 (492) 925-3416
Domicilio: +52 (492) 768-6048
Celular: +52 (492) 544-5985
idiez at mac.com
www.idiez.org.mx
On Sep 3, 2004, at 12:25 AM, ANTHONY APPLEYARD wrote:
> --- Stephanie Wood <swood at DARKWING.UOREGON.EDU> wrote:
>> ... the implications behind in atl, in tepetl?
>
> If you mean "atltepetl" = "it is water and it is a hill" = "it is a
> village: in the Valley of Mexico the village needs water for drinking
> and irrigation, and preferably a hill to build a fort on or to live on
> out of reach of floods. Or else, where there has beenb a village for a
> long time, the ground slowly builds up into a mound.
>
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