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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15147

  Value Position Position 2 2 Accepted meanings 15147 2 Obtained votes 88 2 Votes by meaning 0.01 7 Inquiries 435231 3 Queries by meaning 29 7 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/4/2024 5:45:23 PM"




autoantónimo
  39

It is an easier way to call the result of enantiosemia, when a word begins to be used with its opposite meaning and becomes its own anonymity.

  
antífrasis
  41

He is a rhetorical figure who names something by his opposite or by a quality he lacks; it's usually an irony. It is the same name given to it by the ancient Greeks : 945; 957; 964; 953; 966; 961; 945; 963; 953; 962; ( "opposite expression" antiphrasis) .

  
vegetariano
  54

Supporter of vegetarianism, which does not eat any food that comes from animal suffering. It is the Spanish version of vegetarian English, and although its etymology seems to come from "vegetal" as a plant, the Latin origin goes a little deeper as vegere is a verb relative to growth, to healthy development. See veganism, vigorousy, ortorexia, frugal.

  
multifacético
  49

It has many facets or faces. It is a voice little used outside of Latin America, perhaps influence of American English. However, it is tighter than its almost multifaceted synonym, which blends Greek with Latin. Multifaceted is of Latin origin : multus ( "many" ) the French facet ( facet "carita; that we adopt as a facet" ) that does come from the Latin facies, ei (fakies , fakei "face , face" ) .

  
chirisiqui
  37

It's not really Spanish but Quechua. See Quechua/chirisiki

  
buyir
  48

In Mexico it is used as to rush, riot to do something. The origin is doubtful, it can be a variant of the verb bullir in its meaning of "shake". It is very common to vulgarize your inflections 'buya' or 'buyas' by 'buiga' or 'buigas', as is the case with 'haya' by haiga.

  
catanga
  53

It was a derogatory way of calling the slave in the 19th century, which was later left to his descendants of African origin. Originally it was the Castilianization of the Quechua name for the hairy beetle, a black shell that pushed or loaded clay balls or excrement to make its nest (and it seemed that it was doing heavy work, like slaves). It is composed of the voices aka ( "poop") tankay ( "push" ) . It is also the name given to an old, ramshackle cargo cart; definition that today can be extended to any type of vehicle in bad conditions.

  
autorreferencia
  41

It is said that there is a self-reference when something creates a return to itself, in its definition, in some of its interpretations or in its discourse. It is a voice formed by the Greek 945; 965; 964; 959; 962; ( cars "to yourself") the Latin refero ( "take back" ) .

  
empedar
  50

It is used as getting drunk, intoxicating, and usually in its pronominal form. It has its origins in the misinterpretation of archaic Spanish embebdar ( "ember" ) , for "embed of spirits" . See also fart .

  
espurio
  21

False, dubious, apocryphal or bastard. It comes from the Latin spurius, a , um where it had the same meaning.

  
pis
  40

Colloquial name of urine, although already in the Latin bass there were pissiare ( "orinar" ) of onomatopeyic origin.

  
churipo
  42

Broth that accompanies meat or vegetables on festive occasions, typical of the village purépecha, which write it churhípu .

  
elegíaco
  13

Sad, pitiful, concerning elegy.

  
ignorable
  36

That you can or should ignore .

  
enantiosemia
  54

Case of polysemia in which a word has two meanings that can be considered as opposites ( e.g. "rent" or "lease", when the parrot does it and when the tenant does). It consists of the Greek voices 949; 957; 945; 957; 964; 953; 959; 962; (opposite means" ) 963; 951; 956; 945; (sema "meaning" ) . See self-tonic, antiphrasis.

  
ortorexia
  31

It is the tendency to eat healthily and in a balanced way. In psychology it is usually taken as a pathological behavior, although in principle the name (more tight) was "ortorexia nervosa". It is a word of Greek etymology, of 959; 960; 952; 959; 962; ( "straight, correct" or 960; 949; 958; 953; 962; ( orexis "appetite" ) .

  
ario
  26

Concerning an Indo-European people from Asia who are supposed to populate much of Europe. There is a theory with very little foundation, but supported by philosophies of supremacist as in Nazism, which reverse the migration from the north of Europe to the east, putting the Germanic race as the origin of civilization and appeasing the name of Aryans. This word comes from Sanskrit and means "noble", although probably in its origins it was the way to call foreigners. Some mystical and occult groups call any member of the human species aryan.

  
cdrxnefk
  15

It is the twenty-first word written by the monkey of Borel 128530; .

  
msjzqjbol
  19

It is the eleventh word written by the monkey of Borel 128513; .

  
carpeta de entrada de correos electrónicos
  34

This is another misplaced query for a dictionary, but it makes it very clear why it is often in Spanish to incorporate neologisms and technical anglicisms for everyday use. It is much cheaper for us to write inbox (although I still prefer "inbox") .

  




       


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