aztec

listen to the pronunciation of aztec
Englisch - Türkisch
meksika kızılderili kabilesi
(isim) Aztek
{i} Aztek

Nahuatl, Azteklerin diliydi. - Nahuatl was the language of the Aztecs.

Englisch - Englisch
Of or pertaining to the Nahuatl language
Of or pertaining to the Nahuas
The Nahuatl language
A Mexica

los señores de Tlatelulco, recibieron mucho enojo y pesadumbre, y dixeron entre sí mesmos: estos mexicanos imaginan que nosotros somos de diferente generacion quellos; no saben que somo mexicanos).

A Nahua

Although united culturally, the Aztecs thought of themselves in terms of their particular tribal affiliations: as Mexica, Tetzcoca, Culhua, Tepaneca, etc.

Of or pertaining to the Mexica people
Nahuatl-speaking people who in the 15th and early 16th centuries ruled a large empire in what is now central and southern Mexico. They may have originated on the northern Mexican plateau before migrating to their later location. Their migration may have been linked to the collapse of the Toltec civilization. The Aztec empire, which at its height comprised roughly five to six million people spread over some 80,000 sq mi (200,000 sq km), was made possible by their successful agricultural methods, including intensive cultivation, irrigation, and reclamation of wetlands. The Aztec state was despotic, militaristic, and sharply stratified according to class and caste. Aztec religion was syncretic, drawing especially on the beliefs of the Maya. The Aztec practiced human sacrifice, an activity that sometimes reached mass proportions. The empire came to an end when the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés took the emperor Montezuma II prisoner and conquered the great city Tenochtitlán (modern Mexico City). See also Nahua
{i} member of an ancient empire situated in present day Mexico
Of or relating to one of the early races in Mexico that inhabited the great plateau of that country at the time of the Spanish conquest in 1519
Last independent state in the Valley of Mexico; capital was Tenochtitlan Thrived between A D 1325 and the Spanish conquest in 1520
The civilization that ruled the region now called Mexico between A D 1000 and 1500 The capital of the Aztec Empire was called Tenochtitlan
One of the Aztec race or people
popular name for the empire centred on the city-state TENOCHTITLAN, whose people called themselves the MEXICA
Indian people in Mexico whose empire was conquered by the Spaniards in 1519 Aztec Ruins National Monument, near Aztec, New Mexico
Group that had extensive civilization in Mexico when Europeans arrived Descendants still create art in their distinctive style
a member of the Nahuatl people who established an empire in Mexico that was overthrown by Cortes in 1519
Aztec gold
The gold of the Aztecs, that was taken by Hernán Cortés in the conquest of Mexico. Associated with pirates

Captain Barbossa: This is Aztec gold. One of 882 identical pieces they delivered in a stone chest to Cortés himself.

Aztec pyramid
One of a number of monumental structures built by the Aztec civilization in the shape of a pyramid with a rectangular base
Aztec pyramids
plural form of Aztec pyramid
Aztec Ruins National Monument
Archaeological site, northwestern New Mexico, U.S. Located on the Animas River just north of the town of Aztec, it was established in 1923 and has an area of
Aztec Ruins National Monument
5 sq mi (1.3 sq km). Mistakenly named by early settlers, the site actually contains the excavated ruins of a 12th-century Pueblo town. It was designated a World Heritage site in 1987
Aztecs
plural of Aztec
aztecs
The Mexica; one of the nomadic tribes that used political anarchy after fall of Toltecs to penetrate into the sedentary agricultural zone of Mesoamerican plateau; established empire after 1325 around shores of Lake Texcoco (p 211)
aztecs
(Nahuatl) A pre-Hispanic empire that controlled much of central Mexico, with a capital in Tenochtitlan, up until the Spanish conquest The Aztecs called themselves the Culhua-Mexica "Huey Tlatoani" or "Great Speaker" was the title of their supreme ruler
aztecs
Native Americans who occupied the region around Mexico City at the time of the Spanish Conquest
aztecs
American native people of ancient Mexico
aztec

    Silbentrennung

    Az·tec

    Türkische aussprache

    äztek

    Aussprache

    /ˈazˌtek/ /ˈæzˌtɛk/

    Etymologie

    [ 'az-"tek ] (noun.) 1787. From Spanish azteca, from Nahuatl aztēcah, plural of aztēcatl "inhabitant of Aztlan".
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