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codices

American  
[koh-duh-seez, kod-uh-] / ˈkoʊ dəˌsiz, ˈkɒd ə- /

noun

  1. the plural of codex.


codices British  
/ ˈkəʊdɪˌsiːz, ˈkɒdɪ- /

noun

  1. the plural of codex

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Example Sentences

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They also used codices, book-like records drawn on bark paper that combined both images and pictograms.

From Textbooks • Apr. 19, 2023

Authors penned chivalric romances and heroic tales of knights battling fantastic monsters and traveling to exotic lands—think, Beowulf and King Arthur—by hand onto parchment and eventually paper codices.

From Science Magazine • Feb. 16, 2022

Driggers cited Mexican-born American artist Enrique Chagoya, who evokes Maya codices — folding books of colorful glyphs — in his satirical “Illegal Alien’s Guide to the Theory of Everything.”

From Washington Post • Aug. 4, 2021

The reassembled pages of his once-scattered codices have been reproduced for display in this exhibition; visitors can also explore digitized versions of the codices in-depth using touchscreens.

From Seattle Times • Jul. 28, 2021

In addition to taking slaves and booty, wartime victors in central Mexico often burned their enemies’ codices, the hand-painted picture-texts in which priests recorded their people’s histories.

From "1491" by Charles C. Mann