in the name of, on behalf of (usually of some higher personage or God)
Molina; and, Robert Haskett and Stephanie Wood's notes from Nahuatl sessions with James Lockhart and subsequent research.
below the stomach (see Molina)
for one’s stomach to rumble (see Karttunen)
a hydropic or a glutton (see Molina)
dropsy (see Molina)
someone with a big belly (see Karttunen)
for one’s belly to swell up (see Karttunen)
a swollen belly (see Karttunen)
to see (a variant of itta); to see something (see Karttunen and Carochi)
patio, interior courtyard within a house compound; atrium, churchyard Susan Kellogg, Law and the Transformation of Aztec Culture, 1500-1700 (Norman and London: The University of Oklahoma Press, 1995), 224.
stomach flu (see Molina)
something hollow or bored through (see Molina)
to cover a sack of wine with pitch (see Molina)
to give someone a beverage to drink (see Molina)
someone with a stomach ache (see Molina)
to have a stomach ache (see Molina)
a possessed person (see Molina); literally, the owl-person became a nahualli