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Definition of Mexican Spanish
1. Noun. The dialect of Spanish spoken in Mexico.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mexican Spanish
Literary usage of Mexican Spanish
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians by Wilfred William Robbins, John Peabody Harrington, Barbara W. Freire-Marreco (1916)
"New Mexican Spanish pasa. Grapes are cultivated at San ... New Mexican Spanish pera.
P'ape, 'yucca fruit' (p'a, Yucca baccata; pe, fruit). Date. ..."
2. The History of the Supreme Court of the United States: With Biographies of by Hampton Lawrence Carson (1902)
"SIXTH EPOCH : 1861 to 1870: OUTBREAK OF THE CIVIL WAR : CHARACTER OF CASES BEFORE
THE COURT : CALIFORNIA LAND CLAIMS: MEXICAN, SPANISH AND FRENCH TITLES ..."
3. The Pacific Ocean in History: Papers and Addresses Presented at the Panama by Henry Morse Stephens, Herbert Eugene Bolton, American Historical Association, Asiatic Institute (1917)
"A complete etymological vocabulary of all the New Mexican- Spanish words of English
... The study of the problem of speech mixture in New Mexican Spanish. ..."
4. House & Garden (1905)
"A revival of the Mexican-Spanish style has been successfully attempted in many
... In Newport, on Rhode Island Avenue, a house in Mexican-Spanish style has ..."
5. The American Year Book: A Record of Events and Progress by Francis Graham Wickware, (, Albert Bushnell Hart, (, Simon Newton Dexter North, William M. Schuyler (1917)
""New-Mexican Spanish Folk- Lore." (Jour. Am. Folklore, 1915.) FOULET, L.—A
Bibliography of Medieval French ... "Studies in New-Mexican Spanish," Part III. ..."
6. The Merchants' Magazine and Commercial Review by Isaac Smith Homans, William B. Dana (1852)
"The British steam packets, Mexican, Spanish, English, French, and Oldenburg
vessels exported specie.—1 American, 1, Mexican, 1 French, and 1 Oldenburg ..."
7. The Journal of American Folk-lore by American Folklore Society (1917)
"New-Mexican Spanish Folk-Lore. Barbara Freire- Marreco. — Stories and Songs from
the Southern Atlantic Coastal Region of Mexico. William Hubbs Mechling. ..."