What is another word for Mexican War?

Pronunciation: [mˈɛksɪkən wˈɔː] (IPA)

The Mexican War, also known as the Mexican-American War, was a pivotal event in the history of both countries. This conflict, which lasted from 1846 to 1848, was a result of tensions over territorial expansion and the United States' desire for greater control over territories in the West. While the term "Mexican War" is the most commonly used descriptor, other synonyms include the United States-Mexico War, the Invasion of Mexico, and the Mexican Campaign. These alternative names offer different perspectives on the conflict, highlighting various aspects of the war's causes and consequences, and the political and social implications of the conflict.

Synonyms for Mexican war:

What are the hypernyms for Mexican war?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Mexican war

  • At the beginning, Lincoln was so inexperienced he had reverence for military expertise, not realizing that there wasn't any military expertise, that the most anybody had commanded up to that point had been somebody, some troops in the Mexican War, and it had been years ago.
    David Herbert Donald
  • By the time the United States took possession of the Southwest in 1848, after the Mexican War, the Navajo had become the dominant military force in the area. ...The American soldiers who marched into Santa Fe had no trouble with the Mexicans, but the Navajo stole several head of cattle from the herd of the commanding general himself, not to mention thousands of sheep and horses from settlers in the vicinity.
    Peter Farb
  • Davis was winning a position as a leader in the Senate. Successor to Calhoun, he had become the spokesman for southern nationalism... not independence but domination from within the Union. This movement had been given impetus by the Mexican War. Up til then the future of the country pointed north and west, but now the needle trembled and suddenly swung south. The treaty signed at Guadalupe Hidalgo brought into the Union a new southwestern domain, seemingly ripe for slavery and the southern way of life: not only Texas down to the Rio Grande, the original strip of contention, but also the vast sun-cooked area that was to become Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, part of Colorado, and California with its new-found gold. Here was room for expansion indeed, with more to follow; for the nationalists looked forward to taking what was left of Mexico, all of Central America down to Panama, and Yucatan and Cuba by extension. Yet the North... had no intention of yielding the reigns. The South would have to fight for this... using States Rights for a spear and the Constitution for a shield. Jefferson Davis, who had formed his troops in a V at Buena Vista and continued the fight with a boot full of blood, took a position, now as then, at the apex of the wedge.
    Shelby Foote

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