Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15139 2 Obtained votes 88 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 434623 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf
"Statistics updated on 5/3/2024 1:13:02 PM"
What has volutes? Rather it seems like a mistake by boludo.
It can be a mistake because of some inflection of agilar, which is a localism with several interpretations, and one of them is precisely "expedite, aprontar". See verbs/agila .
Although in Costa Rica many people write it like this, it is a mistake by pichazo ("strong blow", "large amount of something").
Error distinguishing .
Underrepresentation error.
I don't know if it's a pantocrator error, or if it's also written as a compass.
It is a version of the verb torrar, in its lunfarda meaning of "to sleep, to wander".
Very little used variant of "gabion" in lunfardo; surely a confusion by the origin of the meaning used in engineering, which comes from the Italian gabbione ("cage, barrier").
Variant of the name of broccoli (vegetable).
Another version of psyche, although in Spanish it is not used.
It is another variant for the word chemotherapeutic.
'kt' is a variant of the carat symbol for metals, although K is preferred.
1º_ In the Andean region, the "malted corn" is called 'jora'. See the poorly formatted cayambicaranqui/jora, swear. 2º_ Another spelling for chora ("inhabited area surrounding a Greek polis") .
Male name of Persian origin as 1575; 1585; 1583; 1608; 1575; 1606; ( ardabán "glory of Artá") . See Artaban, Artabide.
'Genesio' is a male name of Greek origin where 947; 949; 957; 949; 963; 953; 959; 962; (genes) is understood as "of origin, of lineage".
John is a masculine given name of Hebrew origin as 1497; 1493; 1495; 1504; 1503; ( Iojanaan "follower of God") . It has versions in almost all languages. And I take the opportunity to leave a link to be between San Juan and Mendoza ("to be drunk").
'Sinesio' is a male name of Greek origin where 963; 965; 957; 949; 963; 953; 959; 962; (synesios) is understood as "intelligence".
'Santino' is a male name that comes from the Latin sanctus ("saint").
'Hannibal' is a masculine given name. It has a Phoenician origin in the expression hanni-Ba'al ("blessed by [the god] Baal").
Ibzan or Abzan, in Hebrew 1488; 1489; 1510; 1503; (ibtsán), is the name of a judge in the Old Testament that today is also used as a male name, although in English "Ibsén" or "Ibsen" are preferred.