Alternative terms

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Lexicographical Neighbors of

Mutawa'een
Muth-labben
Muthammani
Muthammanis
Mutillidae
Mutinus
Mutinus caninus
Mutsuhito
Mutsun
Mutt-and-Jeff
Mutt and Jeff
Mutton Jeff
Muwekma
Muybridge
Muybridgean
Muz Tagh Ata (current term)
Muzaffarabad
Muzak
Muzarab
Muzarabic
Muzarabs
Muztagh Ata
Mwera
Mx
Mx proteins
MySpace
MySpacer
MySpacers
MySpaces
Mya arenaria

Literary usage of

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Journal of the Manchester Geographical Society by Manchester Geographical Society (1906)
"To the west of it we find the giant Muz Tagh Ata, 24400ft., and not far distant rises the snow-topped summit of Mount Kungur. Eastward is the lofty Kwen Lun ..."

2. Sand-buried Ruins of Khotan: Personal Narrative of a Journey of by Mark Aurel Stein, Aurel Stein (1904)
"This was Muz-tagh-Ata, " the Father of Ice Mountains," which I had so long ... Muz- tagh-Ata, still so distant, showed itself in fascinating clearness ..."

3. The Earth and Its Inhabitants by Élisée Reclus (1891)
"This mountain, known also as the Wi-tagh ("House Mount") and Muz-tagh-ata ("Father of the Ice Mounts"), rises, according to Trotter and ..."

4. The Geographical Journal by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain) (1900)
"... I returned the next day to the west side of Uchi, erected the theodolite at a much lower elevation than before, and observed Muz Tagh Ata—which has, ..."

5. Mountain Panoramas from the Pamirs and Kwen Lun by Aurel Stein (1908)
"It comprises to the south the watershed between the Kashgar and Yarkand rivers (Ulugh-Rabat pass) and the great massif of Mount Muz- tagh-ata. ..."

6. Around Afghanistan by Bouillane de Lacoste (Henri) (1909)
"... and, whatever it cost, we decided to follow the advice of the natives, and to reach Yarkand by the path which crosses the spurs of the Muz-Tagh-Ata. ..."

7. Explorations in Turkestan: With an Account of the Basin of Eastern Persia by Raphael Pumpelly, William Morris Davis, Ellsworth Huntington (1905)
"Muz-tagh-ata, one of the world's highest mountain peaks, is plainly in sight from Fig. 126.—View of the Tertiary strata on"the"edge iof the Kashgar Basin ..."

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