Citations:tenamaste

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word Citations:tenamaste. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word Citations:tenamaste, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say Citations:tenamaste in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word Citations:tenamaste you have here. The definition of the word Citations:tenamaste will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofCitations:tenamaste, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.

English citations of tenamaste

not italicized

  1. Any of the three stones traditionally used to elevate a comal above a fire in Mesoamerican cultures, or all three taken together.
    • 1987, Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation, page 174:
      Tenamaste stones were used as pot rests or firedogs in a cooking fire.
    • 2005, Pablo Valderrama Rouy, The Totonac, in Native Peoples of the Gulf Coast of Mexico, page 199:
      Also, at the foot of the tenamastes people bury coins, chiles, grains of corn, and a handful of beans to assure that the domestic food supply will never run out. Contemporary Totonac usually construct a wooden box with legs that is filled with dirt on which the tenamastes are placed. The most sacred place in the main room is the home altar

can't see snippet to tell if italicized or not

  • 1971, Lawrence H. Feldman, A Tumpline Economy: Production and Distribution Systems of Early Central-East Guatemala, page 169:
    The cooking pots were placed on these tenamaste stones

italicized

  • 1978, Doris Tijerino, Margaret Randall, Inside the Nicaraguan Revolution, page 91:
    There was no kitchen but they made a tenamaste—three big stones, with firewood in the middle and on top the casserole to cook in.
  • 1978, Ruben E. Reina, Robert M. Hill, The traditional pottery of Guatemala, page 183:
    The ollas are laid mouth down in two layers — each of the lower vessels is supported by three tenamastes, while the upper vessels are placed at the interstices between those below. Bunches of twigs are stuffed between the tenamastes, and comales are laid
  • 1997, Artes de México, issues 36-39, page 70:
    To which the defendant responded that he had given Faustino powders made of ground tobacco, plantain peels charred to ash, and the jelly and meat from a snake, roasted on the tenamaste stone, all of these combined and mixed together.
  • 2004, Alicia Alarcón, The Border Patrol Ate My Dust (→ISBN), page 107-108:
    I reminisced about those New Year's eves of my childhood. Sitting together with my brothers in front of the kitchen stove. A pot of tamales cooking over hot tenamaste stones. Very close to the cornfields,