M

Letter M: Displaying 21 - 40 of 2863
-mɑːyeːkmɑː
Orthographic Variants: 
-māyēcmā

one’s right-hand side (see Karttunen)

-mɑːyoː
Orthographic Variants: 
-māyō

a tree’s crown, its branches and foliage (see Karttunen)

Orthographic Variants: 
-meh

a plural ending for nouns, originally for animates (people, animals, etc.)

inhabitant of a place ending -mān

-metsɑːkɑyoː
Orthographic Variants: 
-metzācayō

necessarily possessed form one’s shin bone (see Karttunen)

-metsiːʃko
Orthographic Variants: 
-metzīxco

sole of one’s foot (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-metstɬɑmpɑ

sole of one’s foot (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-metstsɑːlɑn
Orthographic Variants: 
-metztzālan

compound postposition between the legs of (see Karttunen)

-misekwil
Orthographic Variants: 
-micicuil

one’s rib (see Karttunen)

at the time of (someone's) death; the word will be possessed, and this will tell who (see attestations)

Orthographic Variants: 
mich-

you, 2nd person singular object, prefix of verbs

James Lockhart, Nahuatl as Written: Lessons in Older Written Nahuatl, with Copious Examples and Texts (Stanford: Stanford University Press and UCLA Latin American Studies, 2001), 225.

-motʃiːwɑyɑːn
Orthographic Variants: 
-mochīhuayān

the proper time or place for something to come about, such as for fruit trees to bear fruit (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-motʃiːwyɑːn
Orthographic Variants: 
-mochīuhyān

the proper time for something to come about (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-monekyɑːn
Orthographic Variants: 
-monecyān

the proper time or place for something (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-monekiyɑːn
Orthographic Variants: 
-monequiyān

the proper time or place for something (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-moːnteːsyoː
Orthographic Variants: 
-mōntēzyō

mother-in-law of a man (see Karttunen)

-mopiloɑːyɑːn
Orthographic Variants: 
-mopiloāyān

place where something hangs, gathers, or looms (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-moteːkɑyɑːn
Orthographic Variants: 
-motēcayān

a place where something spreads itself out on a surface (a necessarily possessed form; see Karttunen)

-moːstɬɑyoːk

the day after something; the next day -- preceded by oc, the day before something (must be possessed)
James Lockhart, Nahuatl as Written: Lessons in Older Written Nahuatl, with Copious Examples and Texts (Stanford: Stanford University Press and UCLA Latin American Studies, 2001), 225.

letter “m”.