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From the capital city of México the trail pointed northward. It meandered through the rugged mountains of the Sierra Madre Oriental, out across the tablelands of the Central Plateau.
1968 March 20, John D Lynch, “Introduction”, in Genera of Leptodactylid Frogs in México (University of Kansas Publications, Museum of Natural History; volume 17, number 11), Lawrence, Kan.: University of Kansas, page 505:
Syrrhophus and Tomodactylus are small assemblages that occur only in southwestern United States, México, and Guatemala.
2009, John Annerino, “Seeing Ghosts”, in Dead in Their Tracks: Crossing America’s Desert Borderlands in the New Era, Tucson, Ariz.: University of Arizona Press, →ISBN, page 113:
Among the worst mass deaths of immigrants in the history of the U.S.–México borderlands, thirteen Salvadoreños died in Alamo Wash in neighboring Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument on July 5–6, 1980; […]
Consequently, it chose to eliminate any possibility of Don Antonio serving as a strong alternate authority to the function of the Junta, by placing him on the top of the list of cabecillas to be arrested and sent to México.
1579, from Classical NahuatlMēxihco, originally a toponym for the Valley of Mexico. Aside from the element -co, the Nahuatl locative suffix, the etymology of this place-name remains uncertain.
It has been suggested to be derived from Mēxihtli, a name belonging to the Aztecs' patron god Huitzilopochtli, in which case the associated locative name could be interpreted as ("place of Huitzilopochtli" or “place where Huitzilopochtli lives”). Another hypothesis suggests the name to be a portmanteau of the words mētztli(“moon”) + xīctli(“navel”), hence the hypothetical original form *Mētzxīcco, meaning “place at the navel/center of the moon”, perhaps referring to the city of Tenochtitlan's position in Lake Texcoco, which was the central lake of a system of interconnected lakes whose shape was likened to that of a rabbit by the Aztecs; an animal associated to the moon. (If that is the case, then the sound of tz/t͡s/ in mētz- has been absorbed into the initial x/ʃ/ of -xīc-, while the geminate cc/kː/ in -xīcco has been transformed into the consonant cluster hc/ʔk/.) A third hypothesis suggests a derivation incorporating metl(“maguey”) (stem me-), perhaps from Mēctli, a maguey goddess, Proto-Uto-Aztecan .