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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15139

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15139 2 Obtained votes 88 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 434517 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/3/2024 8:40:48 AM"




britannia
  35

1º_ Britannia was the name of the Roman province south of Albion Island, which in English is known as Britania and today is the island of Great Britain. The origin of these terms is in the Breton people, who inhabited it until the Anglo-Saxon invasion in the fifth century. See catfish . 2º_ It is also a name for the "metal of Britain", an alloy of tin (93%), antimony (5%) and copper (2%). 3º_ It is the name of novels, series, music bands, . . .

  
california
  35

1º_ Fictional island inhabited by Amazons mentioned in the novel Las Sergas de Espladián (Garci Rodríguez de Montalvo, 1510). 2º_ California is the name of a state in the USA -inherited from the Mexican peninsula and Gulf of California- in addition to several cities and localities in this and other countries. The origin of the name is unclear, but it was surely brought to America by the Spanish. Perhaps from the Catalan calor de forn ("oven heat") that ended in California for the hot attics of the churches, and was associated with the heat of the peninsula; it can also be a literary reference for the previous meaning, or for the Califerne of North Africa mentioned in La Chanson de Roland, a poem of chivalry of the eleventh century.

  
sopa
  32

1º_ Name of a dozen cities in countries such as Zambia, Tanzania, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Mozambique, South Korea, Indonesia, Ivory Coast, Brazil, Benin. 2º_ Food that is embedded or cooked and served in liquids such as broth, milk, cream. Solid food can be bread, noodles, meat, vegetables, . . . 3º_ Inflection of the verb sopar ("to imme, to soak") . See verbs/soup.

  
roma
  30

1º_ 'Rome' is the name of the ancient city-state formed by the union of several villages in the valley of the Tiber River approximately in the eighth century BC. C . , which would eventually become the metropolis of an empire, then seat of the Catholic Church and today is the capital of Italy. The name is an eponym of its mythical founder Romulus. 2º_ There are about thirty cities called 'Rome' in the world, most referring to the name of the Italian. 3º_ Feminine of romo ("without tip") .

  
ecuador
  36

1º_ Maximum parallel of the planet, separates the northern hemisphere from the southern hemisphere. 2º_ Ecuador is the name of a South American country on the Pacific coast. From the Latin aequare ("to equalize"), because through its territory passes the line that divides the world into two equal parts (or more or less). See Quito .

  
cívicomilitar
  30

Error by civicomilitary.

  
espíando
  24

Error by spying.

  
balónvolea
  30

Mistake by volleyball (sport) .

  
péptidoglicano
  28

Error by peptidoglycan .

  
reflexiónar
  25

Surely it is a mistake to reflect.

  
súpervigilancia
  34

Error by 'supervigilance', which would be the word 'surveillance' with the prefix 'super-'.

  
aseóse
  25

I suppose it is an error for a pronominal form of verbs/aseó, which loses the tilde when it becomes flat by the addition of the enclitic.

  
cuéntico
  36

I thought it might be a quantum error ("relative to the quantum"), but immediately afterwards I suspected that they had added an accent written to cuentico ("diminutive of story"), and that it would not be just another troll but, as John Rene Plaut explains, rather a voluntary systole borrowed from a children's poetry.

  
sonic
  15

It means "sonic", "relative to sound, to its speed in the air or to the breaking of the sound barrier". 'Sonic' is also the name of a video game character.

  
corriente de motor
  33

Surely it is a fragment of a text where it will have some meaning, and it can be assumed that it deals with the electric current that circulates through a motor that, obviously, works with electricity; although it may have other interpretations, but in any case it is evident that it does not fit as a dictionary entry.

  
media carrilla
  35

See media ( "sock" ) , medium ( "half , partial" ) , cheek ( "cheek" ) , cheek ( "annoying joke , cheek" ) , cheek ( "strip of leather bullet holders" ) , veneer ( "page , side of a sheet of paper" ) , primer ( "name of some documents" ) , grill ( "barbecue , roast meat , grill for roasting" ) .

  
generación sintex
  29

See generation ("age group" / "relative to what is generated"), sintex (not Spanish, and this link can lead to advertising espam of various companies).

  
sábana sonic
  34

See sheet, Sonic, English/sonic, and for some gross error of an automatic translator see also English/sheet ("sheet" , "score").

  
número azul
  34

Will the hexadecimal be 0000FF? Or the decimal 0 , 0 , 255? Or a confusion from the English sad number, as if it were a 10060;blue number? 128561; ( Note: in accounting the numbers of the 'must' are written with red ink, and those of the 'haber' with black ink. ) See number , blue , happy number , English / blue ( "blue" , "sad" ) .

  
dejarse un forraje
  36

I have the impression that Mr John Rene Plaut's definition is closer to interpretation than to voice over. Or it is too local, and it would be necessary to clarify where it is used. Even to be a paragraph fragment is a bit strange, so I guess it must be another misheard or misunderstood phrase, such as "leave without fodder", which makes a little more sense.

  




       


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