-yotl
Classical Nahuatl
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [-joːt͡ɬ]
Suffix
-yōtl
- (added to nouns) -ness, -ity, -hood, -ship, -ism, -ry; forms abstract nouns.
- tahtli (“father”) → tahyōtl (“paternity, fatherhood”)
- tepitōn (“something small”) → tepitōnyōtl (“smallness”)
- tōltēcatl (“artisan”) → tōltēcayōtl (“artisanry”)
- (added to nouns) forms concrete nouns with senses extended from the original.
Usage notes
This particle undergoes progressive assimilation (where a consonantal sound assimilates into the one that precedes it) in certain situations:
- After ch it becomes -chōtl
- oquichtli (“man, husband”) → noquichcho (“my semen”)
- After l it becomes -lōtl
- nāhualli (“sorcerer”) → nāhuallōtl (“sorcery”)
- After z it becomes -zōtl
- āpīztli (“glutton”) → āpīzzōtl (“gluttony, greed”)
Derived terms
► <a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Classical_Nahuatl_words_suffixed_with_-yotl' title='Category:Classical Nahuatl words suffixed with -yotl'>Classical Nahuatl words suffixed with -yotl</a>
References
- James Lockhart (2001) Nahuatl as Written: Lessons in Older Written Nahuatl, with Copious Examples and Texts, Stanford University Press, page 242
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