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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15230

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15230 2 Obtained votes 125 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 441634 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/15/2024 11:37:22 PM"




hexa-
  20

Prefix to indicate "six" . From the Greek 949; 958; 945; ( hexa "six") .

  
-filia
  12

Suffix indicating a hobby, an inclination of mood. From the Greek 966; 953; 955; 953; 945; ( philia "love, affective inclination") . See philia ("sexual fixation").

  
anemo-
  18

Prefix relative to "wind" . From the Greek 945; 957; 949; 956; 959; 962; ( let's "blow, wind, breath") .

  
-ónimo
  15

Suffix of Greek origin for the name . It is taken from 959; 957; 959; 956; 945; ( onoma "name") .

  
gastr-
  27

It is a prefix of Greek origin, of 947; 945; 963; 964; 951; 961; ( gaster "belly, belly") with the meaning of "stomach" . It has variants such as gastro- or gastero-.

  
fachista
  13

Variant of fascist, perhaps by dissimilation.

  
lusismo
  21

It's another way of calling Lusitanism.

  
baquiña
  20

Another name for the acuya plant (Piper umbellatum).

  
portuguesismo
  13

Another way to call Lusitanism.

  
brexial
  18

It is another name for the taxonomic order of celastroceous plants (Celastraceae). It is used more in the plural (brexiales), and comes from Brexiaceae, which is surely a Latinization of the Greek 946; 961; 949; 967; 969; ( brexo "wet" ) for its waterproof leaves.

  
ícono
  36

Icon variant; it is most used in America.

  
unumpentium
  18

It is another name (actually a previous one) of the chemical element Muscovium, which is Castilianized as "unumpentium".

  
mikrá
  17

It is another of the names by which the Tanakh (sacred writings of Judaism) are known. In Hebrew 1502; 1511; 1512; 1488; (micráa) means "what should be read". By some mistake see micron [note: the measure is not 'mikrá', this would be a transliteration of its Greek origin to know the pronunciation] .

  
dinero
  17

1º_ Official circulating currency. 2º_ Name of some specific currencies. From the Latin denarius, i ("ancient Roman silver coin").

  
video
  22

It is a lexical component for "the visible, what can be seen". Towards the end of the twentieth century he became an apocope of video clips (short films on musical themes). It has its origin in the Latin verb videre (uidere "to see"), where video is "(I) see".

  
oral
  24

Relative to the mouth, and by extension, to the word . It comes from the Latin oralis, e with the same meaning. See language .

  
morbilidad
  19

In principle it is a disease state, but it is more used in a statistical sense for the proportional rates between healthy and sick individuals in the same place and time. It has its origin in the Latin morb, um ("disease").

  
cobarde
  13

It is said of the "fearful, fearful, pusillanimous". It has a remote origin in the Latin cauda, ae ("tail"), since dogs hide the tail between their legs when they are afraid.

  
varón
  23

Male of the human species, especially if it is in adulthood. From the Latin varus , a , um which was an adjective for the chueco of legs, curved by the mount, and which was also used for the coarse man, rough, from which surely came the meaning of virile. See female, male.

  
suicidio
  21

The act of killing himself. It is formed by the Latin voices sui ("his own, own") and the suffix -cidium ("that kills").

  




       


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