ocelotl
See also: oçelotl
Central Nahuatl
    

Ocelotl, “jaguar”.
Etymology
    
From Classical Nahuatl ocelotl.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /oˈseː.loːtɬ/
Synonyms
    
- (jaguar): tecuani
Derived terms
    
Terms derived from ocelotl
Cholula and Milpa Alta
References
    
- Medina, Genaro (1999); online Curso de Náhuatl, Universidad de las Américas; San Pedro Cholula, Puebla, Mexico.
- Mancilla Sepúlveda, Héctor (2002); Lecciones de Náhuatl, Editorial Hirata; Mexico City, Mexico.
- Aguilar Carrera, Sergio (2012); Método práctico de lengua náhuatl del Altiplano Mexicano; Dirección de Casa de Cultura de Tecámac, State of Mexico, Mexico. ISBN 03-2012-030812540200-01.
- w:Panthera onca
Classical Nahuatl
    

The glyph corresponding to the day nahui ocelotl (“four jaguar”), as depicted in the codex Magliabechiano.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /o(ː)ˈseː.loːt͡ɬ/, [o(ː)ˈséː.loːt͡ɬ]
Noun
    
ocelotl anim (plural ooceloh or ocelomeh)
- (it is) a jaguar  (Panthera onca).
- 1571, Alonso de Molina, Vocabulario en lengua castellana y mexicana y mexicana y castellana, f. 75r. col. 2:- Ocelotl. tigre. […] / Ocelome. tigres.- Ocelotl. a jaguar. […] / Ocelome. jaguars.
 
 
- ibid., f. 77v. col. 1.
- Oocelo. tigres.
- Oocelo. jaguars.
 
 
- Oocelo. tigres.
- c. 1600, anonymous author, Anónimo Mexicano, f. 7r:- oquitlalílique miec ytlahuitol, ce cuauhtlí tlacuicuítl, ce ozelotl ycxitlan- They buried him with very many of his things: his bow, an eagle carved of wood, a jaguar at his feet
 
 
- ibid., f. 11r.
- onca:ncamaía, tepe Zolime, totochtin, cuahtotolim, Mazame, oze lome, cuamíztin, tecuanímê
- There were partridges, rabbits, fowl, deer, jaguars, mountain lions, and savage beasts
 
 
- onca:ncamaía, tepe Zolime, totochtin, cuahtotolim, Mazame, oze lome, cuamíztin, tecuanímê
- c. 1609, Tezozomoc, Chimalpahin, Cronica mexicayotl, f. 22r
- camo çan quexquich yn ompa onoque yn ompa tlapia yn tequanime yn cuecuetlachtin. yn ocelome. yn mimiztin yn cocohua- Countless fierce animals were there; bears, jaguars, mountain lions, snakes were on guard.
 
 
- 1645, Horacio Carochi, Arte de la lengua mexicana con la declaración de los adverbios della, f. 4v:- ocēlōtl, tigre. Pl. ōocēlō. [...] ocēlōmê tigres.- ocēlōtl, a jaguar. Pl. ōocēlō. [...] ocēlōmê jaguar.
 
 
 
- (it is) the fourteenth of the twenty day signs of the tonalpohualli; a jaguar or disembodied jaguar's head.
- 16th c., Codex Magliabechiano, f. 13r.
- naVi oçelotl. q qujere dezir quatro tigres.- navi oçelotl. that is to say, four tigers.
 
 
 
- 16th c., Codex Magliabechiano, f. 13r.
Synonyms
    
- (jaguar): tecuani
Derived terms
    
Terms derived from ocelotl
- ocelocopilli
- oceloehuatl
- oceloiyataztli
- ocelomatetepontli
- ocelometl
- ocelomichin
- ocelopetlatl
- ocelopilli
- oceloquichtli
- ocelotamalli
- ocelotenamitl
- ocelotepotzohicpalli
- ocelotetl
- ocelotexochitl
- oceloti
- ocelotia
- ocelotic
- ocelotilmahtli
- ocelotlah
- ocelotlachicomitl
- ocelotlatzacuilli
- ocelotocatl
- oceloxochitl
- oceloyotl
- tlahcoocelotl
- tlalocelotl
Proper nouns derived from ocelotl
- Oceloapan
- Ocelotepec
- Ocelotlan
Descendants
    
References
    
- Alonso de Molina (1571) Vocabulario en lengua castellana y mexicana y mexicana y castellana, Editorial Porrúa, pages 75r, 77v
- Carochi, Horacio (2001) James Lockhart, transl., Grammar of the Mexican Language, with an Explanation of its Adverbs (1645), Stanford: Stanford University Press, pages 30–31
- Chimalpahin Quauhtlehuanitzin, Domingo Francisco de San Antón Muñón (1997) Arthur J. O. Anderson, Susan Schroeder, transl., Codex Chimalpahin, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, pages 70–71
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