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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15278

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15278 2 Obtained votes 125 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 448410 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/22/2024 4:26:32 AM"




homeo
  14

It is a lexical component with the same value of homo for "equal, similar".

  
espirituado
  21

1º_ It is said of those who make a pact with the devil. Possessed by an evil spirit, or also by a startling mood or anguish. 2º_ Variation of spiriting ("very skinny") .

  
fallout
  10

It is called fallout to the particles suspended from the atmosphere that fall to the ground, and also to the fact of the fall in large quantities, especially when they are pollutants such as industrial or radioactive waste. By extension, to an unexpected side effect or side effect. In colloquial form, to a replacement of someone expected and who does not show up. It is formed by the voices fall ( "fall" ) out ( "outside" ) .

  
kioskos
  9

Plural of kiosk (variant of kiosk or kiosk).

  
ergofobias
  11

Plural of ergophobia ("fear of work").

  
dolencias
  16

Plural of ailment ("malaise, disease").

  
incultos
  11

Plural of uncultured ("lacking culture, uncultivated").

  
neguentrópicas
  12

Feminine plural of negentropic ("relative to negenthropy").

  
calentitos
  11

Plural of "warm", as a diminutive of "hot", and in particular by the toasted sandwiches or by the name given in some regions of Spain (as in Seville) to pan fruits such as churro, which is served hot.

  
episteme
  17

It is said of methodological and rational knowledge, differentiated from opinion or opinion, that it can be circumscribed to a time and place. It has Greek etymology as 949; 961; 953; ( epi "envelope , above" ) 953; 963; 964; 951; 956; 953; ( istemi "stand, stand") , a metaphor for "looking over what we are used to". It was used by the sophist Socrates as early as the fifth century BC. C . , and recovered by the philosopher James Frederick Ferrier in the nineteenth century.

  
polígloto
  18

It is said of the person who speaks several languages. It is a word taken from the Greek and is formed by 960; 959; 955; 965; 962; ( polys "many" ) 947; 955; 969; 964; 964; 945; ( glotta "language, language" ) .

  
clima
  9

1º_ In geography it is the area between parallels that has a relatively uniform annual temperature variation due to the inclination that the planet presents towards the Sun. From Greek 954; 955; 953; 956; 945; ( klima "inclination, region, geographical parallel, climate" ) . 2º_ By the previous , atmospheric conditions of a region . 3º_ By the above, and figuratively, animosity, circumstance or general sensation in a place. 4º_ Agricultural measure of about 60 square feet.

  
agalmatofilia
  13

It is a paraphilia motivated by a fetish, an object or situation that in principle would not have a direct relationship with what is considered erotic. It is formed by the term 945; 947; 945; 955; 956; 945; 964; 959; 962; ( agálmatos ) , genitive of 945; 947; 945; 955; 956; 945; (agalma), which is a "beautiful object that produces pleasure and is typically an artistic offering", with 966; 953; 955; 953; 945; ( philia "love, affective inclination" ) .

  
patógeno
  15

That produces diseases; It is said especially of microorganisms. From Greek 960; 945; 952; 959; 962; ( pathos "experience, suffering" ) 947; 949; 957; 959; 962; ( genos "birth, origin" ) .

  
síntesis
  13

1º_ Process that brings together different and separate elements to obtain a new and complex one. From Greek 963; 965; 957; 952; 949; 963; 953; 962; ( syntesis ( "gather, compose") , formed by 963; 965; 957; ( syn "union" ) 964; 953; 952; 951; 956; 953; ( tithemi "to put" ) - 963; 953; 962; ( creates abstract nouns ) . 2º_ For the previous one, gather ideas or concepts scattered in a work as a summary with its most important parts. See summary , synopsis .

  
futbol
  17

Game and sport for two teams of 10 players and a goalkeeper for each, who try to move a ball on the playing field to the opposite goal. The name is a Castilianization of the English word football (fuut bol "football") because England is the origin of the game and its rules, and because the players move the ball with their foot.

  
ruleta
  15

1º_ It is the instrument and the game that uses it to randomly choose an option from a known group. The typical roulette of betting casinos has on a table a cylinder or plate with a wheel of numbered edges by which a small ball is rolled while it is spinning, until at some point they stop with the ball on a number, which is the chosen one. The name is French for roulette ("wheel"), as it is smaller than other versions such as the "Ferris wheel". Watch Russian Roulette. 2º_ In mathematics it is a type of plane curve that graphs the displacement of a rotating point.

  
tala
  10

1º_ Inflection of the verb to cut down, and the same act of "cutting trees until leaving only their foot". See verbs/felling. 2º_ By the previous one, dike or barrier made with logs and cut trees. 3º_ Game of skills, where you jump a wooden cue to hit it with a stick and throw it away. See pingola. 4º_ Common name of the tree Celtis ehrenbergiana . 5º_ Monetary unit of Samoa . See sene .

  
chapó
  12

1º_ Gallicism 'chapó' is actually the Castilianization of chapeau (a type of hat) that is used as an expression of respect or admiration for "taking off your hat". 2º_ It is a variant of the game of billiards, with some bowling ("bowling or bowling"), since it is about knocking down some small pines placed on the cloth. 3º_ Inflection of the verb chapar . See verbs/chapó .

  
monopolio
  11

1º_ It is a market practice by which a company monopolizes the offer of a product or service exclusively. By extension it is used in other areas, to indicate the exercise of an activity that corresponds to a single authority. It comes to us from the Latin monopol?um, which evidently takes from the Greek 956; 959; 957; 959; 960; 969; 955; 953; 959; 957; ( monopolion ) because it is formed by 956; 959; 957; 959; ( monkey "only, unique" ) 960; 969; 955; 949; 969; ( poléo "sell" ) . 2º_ 'Monopoly' (in the original English 'Monopoly') is a board game that simulates the sale of real estate. It is based on the game The Landlord's Game (Elizabeth Magie, 1903), which directly or indirectly inspired others besides this one, which is the American version created by Charles Darrow in 1935.

  




       


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