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  1. According to a user from Ethiopia, the name Tsega means "God's grace". A submission from New York, U.S. says the name Tsega means "Grace/God's Grace". A submission from California, U.S. says the name Tsega means "Gift of God. Usually given to the first born" and is of Amharic origin. According to 2 people from the United States and Ethiopia ...

  2. User Submitted Meanings. 2 people from New Jersey, U.S. agree the name Edahi is of Aztec (Nahuatl) origin and means "God of wind". According to a user from Washington, U.S., the name Edahi is of Aztec (Nahuatl) origin and means "Wind". Search for more names by meaning .

  3. TLAHCO middle, center, half / mediano, que ocupa el centro, que está a la mitad, en medio (S). The first element of this contrasts with TLĀC-TLI ‘torso’ in vowel length as well as final consonant, despite the affinity of meaning. M has this in compounds involving ‘middle’ but not as an independent entry, it contrasts with TLACŌ-TL ...

  4. ma ticmocuitlahui in tlacatlatolli; ma yuhqui timaquizcoatl, tichiquimolin timochiuhtinen (Debe decir: tlatlatolli, de tlatlatoa —frecuentativo de tlatoa— hablar mucho) = ten cuidado de palabrerías; no andes haciendo como maquizcóatl, como chiquimolin (centro de México, s.

  5. cacahuacentli: cacahuacentli (Classical Nahuatl) Alternative forms cacahuacintli Origin & history From cacahuatl ("cocoa bean") + centli, variant of cintli ("dried maize on the… cacahuacintle : …Nahuatl cacahuacentli‎ ("cacao pod"), from cacahuatl ("cacao bean") + centli, cintli ("dried maize still on the cob").

  6. So, Tetzcohco may even be derived from tetzcotl, small hill, and -co, place of, after all. Which would mean the flowers don’t have to do with the literal meaning, but a symbolic representation of Texcoco instead. Except I wonder why the Nahuatl Oregon dictionary doesn’t include it in its dictionary. Who knows!

  7. May 8, 2024 · Aztec religion, the religion followed by the Aztecs, a Nahuatl-speaking people who ruled a large empire in central and southern Mexico in the 15th and early 16th centuries. Aztec calendar stone showing the face of Tonatiuh, the sun god, at the centre. Tlaloc, pre-Columbian statue at the entrance to the National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico City.

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