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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15254

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15254 2 Obtained votes 125 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 444988 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/18/2024 7:04:30 PM"




lustros
  34

Plural of lustro (in its sense of "quinquenium") .

  
webgrafía
  33

I find it another unnecessary and capricious word. It is the "reference found on the web for some work, presentation, thesis, article; also a collection of works created and/or posted on the web". The origin is in words such as bibliography, filmography, discography, . . . and the error of concept is in confusing the medium with the support. Historically the texts were distributed in books, films in films, music on discs, and even when they changed support the reference names were not changed. When using a new network distribution medium, the content remains the same, and then even less is justified a new name. But some moderns are served to stand out among those who know less than they do.

  
ignominoso
  28

Failed by ignominious . .

  
webgrafia
  33

Webgraph error .

  
extreñido
  42

Surely a mistake for constipation.

  
dinamografico
  12

Dynamographic error .

  
artíficie
  18

Artist or artificie error ( artificiing ) .

  
ó
  14

It is - obviously - an 'o' letter with a sharp accent. Although no longer recommended by the RAE, it has a very specific use as an adverse conjunction between numbers, to avoid being confused with a zero ( 0 ). It is useful when writing by hand, with "paper and pencil", and not so much in printing where typography can show an obvious difference. In languages where graphic ticks do not exist, a zero-crossed-one-line design is used, which is similar to the O with bar 'A' , or the Tibetan mean zero '3891;', but of course they are not the same.

  
no pongas la carne en el asador
  18

If it is not some vegan or animalist slogan, I suggest you see all the meat put on the grill. .

  
entregado a un vicio
  23

Another definition put as synonymous, now to be breaded, which bound the doubt that it really is a locution.

  
estar accesible
  12

See Be, accessible .

  
pisar tierra
  38

See pisar, earth.

  
tiocetona
  14

It is a ketone, an organic compound, whose most prominent feature is its unbearable odor. It comes from The Greek 952; 949; 953; 959; 957; ( theíon "sulfur" ) the German ketone ( "acetone") .

  
espamento
  45

Spamento or aspamento is a deformation of slob, with the same meaning. In lunfardo it was used as "who simulates what is not" and also as synonymous with "liar".

  
biógrafo
  34

From Greek 946; 953; 959; 947; 961; 945; 966; 959; 962; ( bigraphs, "writer or narrator of lives") formed by 946; 953; 959; 962; ( bios , 'life, animation' ) 947; 961; 945; 966; 949; 953; 957; ( grafein , "write, register" ) . 1st_ Who makes a biography, own or alien . See chronicler. 2o_ Towards the first half of the twentieth century in Argentina was called 'biographer' the cinema, cinematographer and even the film projector. Several film-producing companies were called "Biograph [something]," and when their films appeared on screen, people associated that word with the film and the place to watch it. See do biographer.

  
pebete
  41

1st_ Aromatic paste to burn . The Spanish arrives by the archaic Catalan pevet, which would be a diminutive of peu ("foot") and which actually names the portasahumerio; but the origin then would be older and we found it in the Latin pes, pedis ( "foot" ) . 2o_ In Argentina and Uruguay is a barely gilded high crumb bread on the edges, usually used for sandwich. The name would be an acronym (or an acronym ) : PBT ( "White Toasted Bread" ) . 3o_ In lunfardo rioplatense is a diminutive of pibe ( "pibito") influenced by the previous one, or perhaps it was already taken as diminutive of the genoese pivetto ( "young, novice" ) . There is another possible etymology from the first meaning, where 'pebete' is a "child with smell ( a pee).

  
piguyo
  40

In lunfardo it's lice. It comes from the genoese pigh-uggio with the same meaning.

  
compadrito
  31

In principle it is a diminutive of compadre; but in Rosario and in the Río de la Plata (Argentina and Uruguay) it was a social type until well into the twentieth century. Let's remember that "compadre" was an affectionate and respectful way of being called among slum porteños, usually thugs or handsome, and that ended up almost as a generic name. The 'compadrito' was a derogatory nickname to those who were not from Buenos Aires imitated the handsome porteño, but in its worst characteristics; he was the commonly called "badly entertained gaucho" who lived or worked in the city, who ended his nights drunk and provoked knife fights. As a discriminatory form he came to name the porteño who lived in the suburbs because his economic condition could not afford to pay for a piece in the center. Over time it became synonymous with malevolent, and even took the nickname with pride.

  
burillón
  11

It's one of the many names of the grief. Also an augmentative of burillo, which would already be a diminutive of burío.

  
huztlán
  22

Another name for the gababillo.

  




       


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