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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15211

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15211 2 Obtained votes 88 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 439481 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/12/2024 9:06:44 AM"




aztequismo
  41

Another way to call Nahuatlism, which comes from the Nahuatl "aztécatl" (gentilicio de Aztlán), with the suffix -ismo.

  
nahuatlismo
  30

This is the name given to every twist or word of Nahuatl origin, especially if incorporated into another language. See suffix -ism .

  
pastafrola
  34

Quince candy cake (although there are variants with dulce de leche or sweet potato). A feature is that it does not have a lid, but on the filling a decoration is made with slats of the same dough forming a grid that allows you to see the sweet. The name has Italian origin as pasta frolla, where frolla is "soft, softened, buttery, crumbling". It has a variant in Spanish created by confusion, which is 'pastaflora'; but used familiarly, it is not an accepted name.

  
pastaflora
  35

Popular variant of the word pastafrola, which has been justified with legends about a tribute to some Flora, or by the name of the pastry chef who created it; but they are all hoaxes.

  
amasio
  36

She is a lover, dear, sometimes concubine, and is used more in feminine (point for feminism 128522; ) . It comes from the Latin amasius, ii which has to do with love, but as in some cases already mentioned, it is for irony and euphemism.

  
reptil
  27

In zoology it is said of the animal of class reptilia. Figuratively it is an adjective for someone dragged by servility, or harmful as , p . e.g. , a viper. It comes from the Latin reptile, is ("reptile, which crawls or crawls").

  
vasar
  36

Shelf to store crockery in kitchens. From the Latin vasarium, ii ("help with utensils").

  
caterva
  28

Disorderly group, tumult of despicable people. From the Latin caterva ("troop, multitude").

  
nocivo
  58

It is said of something or someone "harmful, harmful". It comes from the Latin nocivus, a, um with the same meaning. See nocebo .

  
recursivo
  25

That it repeats itself in all or part of its structure or its rules. Also when something reiterates or contains one or more elements of the same type. It comes from the Latin recursus ("resorted, returned to its origin"). [Note: in reality it has nothing to do with the resource of "means to reach a goal", with a shower person; nor with its legal meaning. ]

  
xeneises
  38

Regardless of whether it wants to be a plural of xeneize ( ?) , there we have some error. From the entry zeneize ("Genoese", "sympathizer of the Argentine football club Boca Junior") you can intuit where the confusion of the /x/ (yes, from the plural) came from, but as it is already used like this, capable that they end up accepting it as an originality that differentiates the Boquense from the Italian gentilicio. Although the plural in English should take the /z/ of the last syllable and convert it to /c/, or leave it only as a /z/. I say , it seems to me .

  
fisioculturista
  59

It should be someone who practices a natural gymnastics, but surely it is a mistake by bodybuilder. See physio- , bodybuilder , bodybuilding .

  
antiacademismo
  33

Feeling professed by a fan of Club Atlético Independiente de Avellaneda (Argentina). [Note: Independiente's classic football rival is its neighbor, Racing Club de Avellaneda, which is popularly known as "the Academy." 128527;

  
metereología
  38

It should be the study of the amount of drink that drunkards consume. Probably from the Greek 956; 949; 952; 951; ( gets "drunken" ) 961; 949; 969; ( réoo "fluid of a liquid" ) 955; 959; 947; 953; 945; ( lodge "knowledge") . Or it may be a mistake due to 128513 meteorology; .

  
consecotaleofobia
  40

It's one of those absurd names they invent for supposed phobias of anything, and in this case it's for the "fear of chopsticks to eat Chinese food." There is the fear of what has Chinese origin (sinophobia) and the fear of sharp objects (belenophobia, aicmophobia, trypanophobia, cnidophobia), but that of the Chinese sticks is ridiculous. And the etymology is also suspicious; although 952; 945; 955; 955; 959; 962; (thallós "sapling, young branch") is Greek, I have problems with conseco, secui, sectum, because it is an ancient Latin word for "cut" that evolved as consecum ("dismember, separate food"), and there is also in Latin talea ("branch, stick"), so it seems to me that we are facing another etymological trout closer to versions such as the English chopstick -literally "stick for portions ( of food ) - than to the original Chinese 31607; 23376; ( cjuai zi ) , which is formed by 23376; ( zi "little, son" ) 31607; ( cjuai "chopstick, crockery utensil") . Ah, and yes, 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; (fovos "fear") comes from the Greek.

  
engrupido
  33

1º_ Participle of the verb engrupir ("to deceive") . 2º_ As an adjective and noun it is said of someone deceived or defrauded. 3º_ Also as an adjective and noun is a conceited, vain person. It is a variant of the previous meaning in the sense of "believed or deceived of himself, of his own value".

  
okupado
  29

1º_ As an adjective it is said of the place usurped by squatters for any purpose. 2º_ Participle of the verb okupar . See verbs/squatted.

  
radicalizado
  28

1º_ As an adjective it is said of someone fanaticized with an ideology according to its founding precepts, without accepting evolutions, updates or adaptations according to the situation. He usually becomes a violent defender of his ideas, attacking those who don't think like him. It is used as an extreme version of radical ("true to the roots, to the origins"). 2º_ Participle of the verb radicalize .

  
enviado
  37

1º_ Person who travels to a place with an errand or mission entrusted by someone interested. 2º_ Participle of the verb send .

  
comprimido
  28

1º_ Participle of the verb compress . 2º_ As an adjective it is said of what is reduced in size by compression, or of what is narrower than usual. 3º_ As a noun it is commonly used for the dose of drug concentrated in a capsule or pill.

  




       


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