Xitlaly is a Hispanic spelling variant of Citlali, from Nahuatl, meaning star.
Xitlaly is a variant spelling of Xitlali (also rendered Citlali or Citlaly), a Nahuatl name meaning 'star.' Nahuatl, the language of the Aztec empire, remains a living tongue spoken by over a million people in Mexico today, and its naming tradition produces some of the most phonetically and semantically striking names in the Americas. The root 'citlalin' (star) appears across a family of related names — Citlali, Citlalli, Xitlali, Xitlaly — with spelling variations reflecting different attempts to transcribe Nahuatl sounds into the Latin alphabet.
The 'X' in Xitlaly signals the Nahuatl phoneme that sounds like the English 'sh' — a sound that once pervaded Spanish through Nahuatl loanwords before Spanish phonology shifted it to 'j.' This means the name is typically pronounced 'shee-TLAH-lee,' though regional variations exist. The name belongs to a constellation of Nahuatl star names alongside Citlalmina (star that shoots arrows) and Citlaltonac (luminous star), reflecting the profound astronomical knowledge of pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures, who mapped the night sky with extraordinary precision.
In the United States, Xitlaly gained visibility in the late 20th century as Mexican-American communities — particularly in California, Texas, and the Southwest — embraced indigenous names as acts of cultural pride and identity. The name's beautiful complexity, with its silent-seeming 'X' and cascading syllables, has made it a favorite in communities honoring indigenous heritage. It sits at the intersection of Aztec astronomy, colonial linguistic history, and contemporary Chicana identity, a name that carries civilizations in its spelling.