Dictionary
 Open and Collaborative
 Home page

Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15211

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15211 2 Obtained votes 95 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 439567 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/12/2024 2:24:22 PM"




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.

  
sacar la puta
  44

It seems to me that it is a mistake because of the phrase "get the tip out" (p. and. , from a pencil ) , because as well as locution I never heard it. Although we already know that swear words are used as if they were a wild card in the middle of any phrase to express any concept, so just in case: see whore.

  
judeocristiano
  46

It is said of what the Jewish and Christian religions share, taking into account that the latter has its foundations in the former. See Judaism, Christianity.

  
jerusalén
  43

1_ Jerusalem is the name of a city claimed as the capital of the State of Israel and partly as the capital of the State of Palestine. Its conflicts come almost from its foundation prior to the Jews as a village 5000 years ago, it was invaded, razed and rebuilt by Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Macedonians, Seleucids, Romans, Parthians, Byzantines, Sassanids, Turks, Fatimids, Tatars, Mamluks, Ottomans, British, Jordanians, . . . This led to the city having different names according to the period of government, such as the current one in Arabic 1575; 1604; 1602; 1600; 1615; 1583; 1618; 1587; ( al cuds "La Santa" ) , but in Spanish - and in almost all the West - the Hebrew version 1497 is taken; 1456; 1512; 1493; 1468; 1513; 1464; 1473; 1500; 1463; 1497; 1460; 1501; ( ieruyalaim ) which is interpreted as 1506; 1497; 1512; 1492; 1513; 1500; 1493; 1501; (irja yalom "City of Peace") for its religious character not only for Jews but also for Christians and Muslims, although it is most likely that its origin is pagan, and that at first it was a city dedicated to the Semitic sun god Shalem. See Bethlehem . 2º_ There are more than a dozen geographical places, especially in America, with the name of Jerusalem. All are a tribute to the city that exists in the Near East.

  
belén
  60

1_ Bethlehem is the name of a city in the West Bank (State of Palestine), which has great religious significance for Judaism, Christianity and Islam, as it is considered the birthplace of Jesus and King David. The origin dates back to about 3000 years, when according to biblical tradition it was built by the king of Judah Rehoboam. The name has different interpretations, in principle it is supposed to be a tribute to the Chaldean god of fertility Lahmo, who was adopted by the Canaanites who baptized their fortification as Beth Lehem ("the house of Lahmo"); but later it lost its pagan etymology and was reinterpreted in Hebrew as 1489; 1497; 1514; 1500; 1495; 1501; ( bet lejem "house of bread" ) or in Arabic as 1576; 1610; 1578; 1604; 1581; 1605; ( bait lajm "house of the flesh") . Greek, Latin and later Spanish simply transliterated it. See Jerusalem . 2º_ Name of several cities and municipalities, in most cases as a tribute to the previous one. 3º_ Representation of the manger where Jesus Christ was born. By extension and poetically, any stable. 4º_ Complication, disorder. It's probably an understatement. 5º_ Common name for the balsamine plant. 6º_ As with many religious words, Bethlehem is also used as a personal name, usually feminine.

  
budismo
  36

It is a philosophy of life originating in India around the fifth century BC. of C . , and it is considered a non-theistic religion since its referents are not gods but people who reached a higher state of spiritual enlightenment, which anyone can reach through meditation. The name comes from Sanskrit 2348; 2369; 2342; 2381; 2343; (buddha "awake, enlightened" ), which is how the sage Siddh?rtha Gautama was known, founder of 'Buddhism' based on his teachings.

  
hinduismo
  38

Set of Vedic religions practiced in South Asia, which has its origin in the Indus Valley around 4000 BC. of C . and evolved into a syncretism that only in the nineteenth century was baptized as 'Hinduism' by the Indian intellectual Ram Mohan Roy, as a socio-political reaffirmation during the British occupation; although in India it is named in Sanskrit as 2360; 2344; 2366; 23( 2344; 2343; 2352; 2381; 2350; ( Sanaatan Dharm "Eternal Religion") . The etymology comes from 'Hindu', which Spanish takes from the French Hindou, but has a pre-Islamic Persian origin, for the name given to the region of the Sindhu River (jindu "Indus").

  
judaísmo
  26

Name of the Jewish tradition and religion. It is the oldest known monotheistic faith, although the name is applied only from the sixth century BC. C . . The etymology is Hebrew and comes from the "kingdom of Judah", by 1497; 1456; 1492; 1493; 1468; 1491; 1464; 1492; (Yehuda "I thank God"), which is the name of a son of Jacob.

  
cristianismo
  37

Social and religious movement appeared during the first century in the Near East following the doctrine of Jesus, called The Christ ("anointed") that ended up spreading until today throughout the world. It is a detachment from Judaism that is currently made up of several religions and sects (some not officially recognized). See Jesus Christ, I was a Christian.

  




       


This website uses your own and third party cookies to optimize your navigation, adapt to your preferences and perform analytical work. As we continue to navigate, we understand that you accept our Cookies Policies