-
Known to the
Aztecs as teonanácatl, from the
Nahuatl teotl ("god") +
nanácatl ("fungus"). This
species was
categorized by
French botanist Roger Heim...
- (literally "divine mushroom": the
agglutinative form of teōtl (god, sacred) and
nanācatl (mushroom) in
Nahuatl language) was
reportedly served at the coronation...
- the
Aztecs as teōnanācatl (agglutinative form of teōtl (god, sacred) and
nanācatl (mushroom) in Náhuatl) was
reportedly served.
Moctezuma II was, although...
- "divine mushroom": the
agglutinative form of teō(tl) ("god", "sacred") and
nanācatl ("mushroom") in Nahuatl.[citation needed]
After Spanish explorers of the...
- the
Aztecs as teōnanācatl (agglutinative form of teōtl (god, sacred) and
nanācatl (mushroom) in Náhuatl). An
earlier work, the Badi**** M****cript or Libellus...
- "divine mushroom" with teo(tl)
referring to a
divine or
sacred force and
nanácatl meaning mushroom. The name is
often times mistranslated to "the
flesh of...
-
Nahuatl literally "god mushroom"—compound of the
words teo(tl) (god) and
nanácatl (mushroom). Hihīrokane,
described in the
apocryphal Takenouchi Do****ent...
-
words oyamelnanácatl ("fir mushroom", from
Nahuatl oyametl "fir", and
nanacatl "mushroom"),
tlapitzal (derived from tlapitzalli,
Nahuatl for "trumpet")...