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Meaning of alondra




furoya

alondra
  64

Canora, common bird in southern Europe. The origin of the name is Celtic voice alauda or arauda, which was built by the Romans during their conquests as alaudula ("alondrina, diminutive form of Lark") leaving the original alauda for scientific texts, and that she was then returned to the East d the Empire where it evolved into the Spanish lark.

  




Danilo Enrique Noreña Benítez

It is one of the common names of a very distributed Songbird. Its scientific name is Alauda arvensis. It belongs to the family Alaudidae. It is the Mockingbird family. It is also used as a woman's name, of Spanish origin and means as melodious as a lark.

  


Margarito Cázares Guerrero

Name own feminine

  


Anónimo

LARK: Ave. suboscine of up to 20 cm, long, brown plumage with black lists by the back and white underparts, forked tail and short and round Crest that emits a pleasant singing and nests in the fields.

  


David Bowman

I am in mood and aparejador circumstances have heard calling in Madrid (41 Spain; ' Skylarks ' in men, Masons. In the jargon of the trades, and more specifically in the jargon of the guilds of building ( plumbers, carpenters, painters, heating, etc ) the ' Lark ' and ' Skylarks ' they are usual synonymous with ' Mason ' and ' Masons '. This synonymy is nice because the builders work on scaffolding, roofs and facades where, often, ( they sing or sang: today, increasingly less )

  



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