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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 444736 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/18/2024 3:31:21 PM"




orquis
  34

It can be a Castilianization of the orchid genus Orchis, from the Greek 959; 961; 967; 953; 962; ( pr . orchids "testicle".) . See orchid , doctor/orqui ( or ) prefix .

  
zaghroota
  29

It is one of the many ways to pronounce the name for a war cry of Egyptian origin, which was also a greeting, as a applause and sign of joy, and this is the most popular sense today. One of its most striking features is that the sound is modulated by moving the tongue, which is left out of the mouth. In Arabic the name has some pronunciation variants according to village or region, one of the most common is 1586; 1594; 1575; 1585; 1610; 1583; ( zagarid, zagarudo), which has been transliterated in many ways ( zaghareet , zaghrouta , salguta , sarguta ).

  
insofern
  32

It is not Spanish, but an adverb in German mode. See aleman/insfern .

  
divé
  13

It's "god, divinity" in caló. For monotheists it's "God." Although it is not Spanish, it is understood and used by gypsy influence. See undivé.

  
kuchen
  30

Although it is German, the word kuchen ( cujen "pastel") is used in Spanish to name a sweet or salty cake of the type bizcochuelo, of European origin.

  
shemagh
  59

It is not a Spanish word, and it must obviously be Spanishized; it is one of the names for a pashmina-like handkerchief used in the Middle and Near East to cover the head and neck from the cold, sun and sand. It is widely used by the militias, but it also has political and social connotations. In the West it is used mostly by fashion. It comes from the Arabic 1588; 1605; 1575; 1594; ( yemaag ), and has other names that in many cases depend on color and design, or country of origin.

  
chulaso
  68

It must be a mistake by shot, or suck.

  
líbido
  46

It can be a mistake by livid, libido, . . .

  
caterba
  23

It's almost certainly a mistake by caterva.

  
agruptas
  18

It seems the plural feminine of abrupt misspelled.

  
sándwich
  36

Originally in English it was a piece of meat between two slices of bread. The name is an eponymous (Spanish only with an accent) by John Montagu, Count of Sandwich (England, 1718 - 1792); that according to the bad tongues was a ludopath who not to abandon his card games carried meat cooked between breads for his lunches, because he could eat it with one hand while playing with the other. Today any "ingredient between breads" is called sandwich. See sandwich , English/sandwich .

  
que significa recto
  19

See straight.

  
que son trifigos
  17

If it wasn't plural I'd say the misplaced and misspelled query is covert spam. But rather I think you're by a mistake about triffids.

  
momentáneo en latín ad tempus
  31

This time it is a so-called and regrettable anonymity put in ad eternum.

  
que se el pingullo
  12

To write a misquery and misplace it was easier to type pingullo. By some other mistake, see piguyo.

  
recto
  33

It is right, it has no curves, bends or angles. In a broad sense it is used by invariable, incorruptible, honorable. It is also called 'straight' the final part of the intestine that flows into the anus. See ortho, ocote.

  
aspaviento
  60

"Make a slob" means that someone is overacting a situation, because when exaggerated they usually move their arms like the blades of a windmill. It is also used in plural with the same meaning. See aspa, winding, winding.

  
distrés
  19

For some of the most modern definitions of stress, the 'distrés' would be a "negative stress" - the stress itself, bah - to differentiate it from the Eustrés. The term was created using the Greek prefix 948; 965; 962; (dys, "bad, opposite" ) stress (which comes from Latin, going through English and French).

  
rajaduras
  14

Plural crack.

  
chiches
  35

Plural of chiche .

  




       


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