t'aqasqa
(adj) Separated. QPQP · Quechua Phrasebook, Coronel-Molina
14 entries
(adj) Separated. QPQP · Quechua Phrasebook, Coronel-Molina
(v) To separate. QPQP · Quechua Phrasebook, Coronel-Molina
(n) Flower. PSLPSL · www.geocities.com/phillott/Bolivia/Dictionary02.htm — Bolivian Quechua
(v) To flower, to bloom. PSLPSL · www.geocities.com/phillott/Bolivia/Dictionary02.htm — Bolivian Quechua
(v) To translate. QPQP · Quechua Phrasebook, Coronel-Molina
(n) A hole, window. QPQP · Quechua Phrasebook, Coronel-Molina
(v) (1) To meditate, to think deeply. (2) To be astonished. PSLPSL · www.geocities.com/phillott/Bolivia/Dictionary02.htm — Bolivian Quechua
(n) Mud. QPQP · Quechua Phrasebook, Coronel-Molina
(v) To make calm, to cause to subside. PSLPSL · www.geocities.com/phillott/Bolivia/Dictionary02.htm — Bolivian Quechua
(v) To calm, subside. PSLPSL · www.geocities.com/phillott/Bolivia/Dictionary02.htm — Bolivian Quechua
(adj) Old, worn out. QPQP · Quechua Phrasebook, Coronel-Molina
(n) One of the many names of Wiracocha, but may be more ancient. Thunapa was a pre-Incan storm god, upon whom the Incas modelled their own storm god, Illapa. MANMAN · Mythology of the American Nations, Jones and MolyneauxA figure of Callao legend, he became identified with Wiracocha. Like Wiracocha, he arrived mysteriously from the south on the banks of Lake Titicaca at a time when the sun had just returned after a long absence. He had magical powers to make water flow from stone and the imprint of his feet could be seen even in hard rock. As he made his way north through the Andean foothills, he inspired universal veneration and acquired the name of Ticci Wiracocha. IAWSIAWS · Mythology, Illustrated Anthology of World Myth & Storytelling The name of a Light Being from Lake Titicaca. His face is carved in the side of the mountain at Ollantaytambo in the Sacred Valley of the Incas. IGMPIGMP · Andean Awakening: An Inca Guide to Mystical Peru, Delgado Legendary god who walked among men and founded the vast majority of the existing temples of Peru; the legends leave unclear whether this figure is Wiraqocha, but it appears more likely that he is the son or spawn of Wiraqocha, or is an entirely independent figure, yet Thunupa is said to have created the Ruta de Wiraqocha, the legendary pilgrimage path that cuts through Peru. Thunupa is typically described as a white-skinned man with a long beard and features similar to those of Quetzalcoatl of the Maya and Jesus Christ; he was, in the Andes, the Pacha Yachachiq — the world teacher. ANON1ANON1 · anonymous donor 1 (see footnote on the original Text Sources page for explanation)
(v) To spit. RSRS · runasimi.de