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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15204

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15204 2 Obtained votes 88 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 439088 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/11/2024 12:08:50 PM"




chaveta
  47

It is a latch, a piece in the form of a nail that serves to hold two others through ears or holes that they have for that purpose. Its origin is in the Italian ciavetta (chiaveta "little key, clavito"). See deschavetar .

  
quicio
  34

Type of hinge in doors or windows with a bolt as a pivot that fits in a proper corner, on which they are beaten and that keeps them in place and working. The "sanity, reasonableness" is actually a figurative sense misinterpreted from words like unhinged or unhinged, and locutions like "out of whack" or "get out of the way", and does not fit in the definition.

  
napolitano
  32

Gentilicio and relative to the city and the Gulf of Naples .

  
sanjonés
  26

1º_ Gentilicio of one or several localities with name "Sanjón" . 2º_ Name of a member of an indigenous tribe of Peru.

  
germano
  31

Relative to Germany, or more precisely to Germania, by the name given by the Celts, then the Gauls and then the Romans to the primitive people from which they come.

  
catalán
  37

Relative or native to Catalonia (Spain).

  
americano
  37

Relative to the American continent, also its name. See America .

  
estadounidense
  24

Relating to the United States of America, also its name. See Yankee, USA.

  
oriental
  29

1º_ From the east, relative to a region in the east or to that cardinal point. 2º_ In the area of the Río de la Plata it is said especially of the native of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay.

  
lunero
  37

1º_ Gentilicio de Luna (municipality in Zaragoza, Spain). 2º_ Person with the typical fatigue of Mondays. It may come from the pun "Monday lunero, rattlesnake", which refers to the verse "moon lunera, rattle". 3º_ It is also used as an alunado (moody), and even as a lunatic.

  
remake
  28

It is English, but it is used in Spanish with the same sense of "redo" for the new version of a film or other work already presented. See english/make , cover .

  
streaming
  33

It is English, but it is used in Spanish to name the data transmissions that are to receive live, at the time of broadcast and not to be saved by the receiver. They are a practical method of broadcasting live shows, or radio, or music and movies that would demand a lot of resources for storage on the client side. The original streaming can be translated as "streaming". Watch streamer .

  
skimming
  26

It is a type of bank fraud by which credit or debit card information is copied to make operations in the name of its owner, asking for credits or extracting their money. It is taken from the English skimming ("brushed, on the fly") which is used especially for filtering and capturing relevant information in a context.

  
memorabilia
  25

It is a word that is heard in Spanish, although it is taken from English where memorabilia is an equivalent to souvenir, an "object of remembrance of something or someone that for its possessor is emotional, memorable". It comes from the vulgar Latin memorabilis ("memorable, remarkable").

  
indie
  20

It is a voice used in English as a diminutive of independent for all off-circuit production of the large arts and entertainment industries. It is also used in Spanish, pronounced 'indi' but keeps the original spelling.

  
aquagym
  33

Practice of physical exercises in the water, usually in a swimming pool. It is a contraction in English for aqua ("water") and gymnastics ("gymnastics") that is used in Spanish because it is shorter than "aquatic gymnastics" and sounds better than its "hydrogymnastic" version.

  
sponsor
  30

It is a word in English that is used in Spanish even if there is a "sponsor or sponsor". It has a Latin origin as sponsor, is ("godfather, guarantor").

  
clip
  32

1º_ It is an anglicism for a small hook that is used to hold sheets of paper to each other, and that is easily removable and reusable. By extension it applies to other clamps for different materials (p. and. 'hair clip'). From Old English clyppan ("to embrace"), with a distant antecedent in Frisian kleppa of equal significance. 2º_ Anglicism for a cinematographic short film, although in practice it differs from the short because it is an apheresis of video clip, which is used more to name the advertising shorts, the musicals with a single song, the fragments cut from a feature film for promotion. From the Nordic klippa ("cut, shear" ). 2º_ It can also be used as an onomatopoeia.

  
cima antónimo
  26

See antonym, peak, valley, decline, chasm.

  
conceder antónimo
  32

Are antonyms granted? And what would be the antonym to be granted? . See grant, antonym, . . .

  




       


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