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Spanish Open dictionary by Francisco Valdez Mendoza



Francisco Valdez Mendoza
  374

  Value Position Position 21 21 Accepted meanings 374 21 Obtained votes 4 33 Votes by meaning 0.01 5305 Inquiries 14963 19 Queries by meaning 40 5305 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/18/2024 9:31:56 PM"




gaudio
  25

Sust. MASC. Joy, pleasure ( commonly spiritual ). Derived from the Latin noun "gaudium, gaudii" cases nominative and genitive singular ( of «joy of joy» ) derived from the verb «gaudere»: enjoy. Synonyms: joy, conviviality, Jubilee. Antonyms: grief, mourning, loss, sadness.

  
geronte
  29

1 Adjective. Elderly person. 2 In the plural, substantive applied in the old Greece to elderly and notable men who constituted the Council of Agamemnón or Agamenón: mythological character that following the abduction of Paris to Elena and her shelter in Troy, led the expedition against - and subsequent defeat - the Trojans. Then Clytemnestra, Elena ( a sister and the wife of Menelaus, brother of Agamnenón ) murdered the caudillo and the Trojan prophetess Cassandra, lover of this. The word derives from the Greek adjective "géroon, géroontos": nominative cases: old, and genitive singular: old.

  
iconoteca
  25

Noun. Gallery, room or collection of works of art, mainly images or paintings of portraits. The word is composed of 'eikóon, eikóonos' Greek nouns: nominative and genitive singular of image ( the combination of vowels 'ei' is not a diphthong; He is pronounced 'i' ) and «théekee»: box, box, compartment, deposit, case.

  
miserere meus
  14

Latin phrase equivalent to «consistent you me;» "have mercy on me". The verb reflexive and transitive 'miserere': pity, afflict you, condoler is, move, and the adjective and possessive pronoun «meus»: me, me.

  
osare
  29

Future time ( future simple ) the case of the intransitive verb subjunctive bone. The origin of this is from the vulgar Latin verb «ausare», frecuentativo of «audere»: risk, dare. Here comes the bold adjective.

  
coxotomía
  16

Surgery of the hip. Hybrid noun in turn composed of two nouns: the Latin "coxa": hip, and Greek 'took': cutting, incision, section.

  
ovívoro
  19

That he swallows eggs. From Latin, consisting of adjective: ) the neuter noun 'ovum, ovi': cases nominative and genitive singular, which respectively mean egg, the egg; (b) ) the 'voro' of the verb «vorare» ending: feed avidly, devour.

  
orar
  26

1 Ask for divine intervention ( 41 prayer; or through intercessions to obtain help, favors, health, miracles, etc. 2 Speak before public, harangue, lecturing, prattle. Intransitive verb derived from Latin "orare": speak of the noun ', oris ': nominative and genitive singular, respectively, to mean palate of the mouth. Synonyms: worship, ask, ask.

  
paidocida
  34

Perpetrator ( ) child ( ). The word is a hybrid neuter noun derived from the Greek 'country, paidós': child, and from the Latin 'caedes, caedis', nominative and genitive singular of murderer, the verb 'caedere': kill, hender, mutilate.

  
soprano
  26

Abbreviated masculine adjective. More high register of the human voice, as their own child and - especially in the "bel canto" ( 41 Opera; - the female. Includes three tessitura: 1 ) drama: powerful volume, maximum amplitude; 2 ) lyrical or light: height average; 3 ) coloratura: high availability for great sound ornaments. Derived from the Latin 'supranus', with the preposition 'super' paragoge: about.

  
plugo
  57

Irregular inflection, preterite ( past perfect simple ) intransitive verb pleasure, third person singular. Regular conjugation is 'willed'. Example: he plugo to God. This construction, as well as his resemblance to prayer, by the radical 'pl', erroneously leads to a meaning of prayer - or begged - God. Synonyms: he wanted to, he decided, available, resolved. The verb pleasure comes from the Latin verb «pleasures»: please.

  
yuso
  32

Adverb of place. Apheresis de ayuso: down. Comes from the low Latin «iusus», which in turn derives from the Latin 'deorsus', consisting of «of» and «vorsum»: Vortex, depth.

  
pugna
  56

1. Noun: battle using his fists. Synonyms: fights, pendency times, lawsuit, Brawl, Brawl, 2. third person singular of the verb to endeavor: call, request vehemently. Synonyms: strive, strive, porfiar. To derive, from the Latin noun "pugno» ( pronounced 'fist' ): fist; the verb, «pugnare» ( pronounced 'puñare' ).

  
provisional
  30

Adjective. It means not definitive, that should be modified, changed or deleted. From Latin "provisorius", derived from «provisus", past participle of the verb «providere»: provide. Synonyms: provisional, interim, temporary.

  
panacea
  37

Noun. Supposedly effective medicine against all diseases. Comes from the Greek "bread": all, and 'akos': remedy, identical etymology of the plant pánace, umbelífera which removes 40 opopónaco; from the Greek 'opós': juice and «pánax»: parsnip ) resin used in Pharmacy and in perfume.

  
inefable
  112

Adjective. Not expressible ( 41 words;. Compound - Latin - the custodial inseparable preposition ( negative ) 'in' and the verb «effari» ( of «ecfari»: pronounce «EC»: outside, and 'do': talk ): Express. Synonyms: unspeakable, unspeakable, unspeakable, inexpressible.

  
cohecho
  23

Noun. Induction, by illegal means, money or by deception, to miss the duty. From the Latin «coactus» ( participle of preterite of "cogo": pump, push ): forced, fictional, not natural. Synonyms: duress, coercion, bribery, corruption.

  
aquinesia
  48

Acinesia. Noun. Immobility. Inability of muscle movement, accidental or voluntary, fictional, as it is the case in some vertebrates and insects. From the Greek 'a': inseparable, custodial, preposition meaning "without", and of the substantive «kíneesis»: movement. Synonym: paralysis.

  
diagenesis
  17

Diagenesis. Geological noun. Chemical and physical in sediments, subsequent changes to your deposit, for which become consolidated rocks. According to facies of their environment, include compaction, cementation, recrystallization and rare times, replacement ion, as happens in some limestones, consisting mainly of calcite: distinct, in which susbstituye partially to calcium magnesium, and her transmutes in dolomite: (CO3 ) 2CaMg, a process called dolomitización. The term derives from the Greek, the prefix «day»: through, and substantive "Genesis": origin. Synonyms: evolution, mutation, transmutation, transformation.

  
xanthus
  19

Xantus Murrelet ( 41 small merganser;. Waterfowl family of auks 40 sea bird;AUK ) genus and species ' Synthliboramphus hypoleucus» or «Endomycura hypoleucus», in the lower portion and the wings dark above and white plumage. He brooded on islands of California - United States - and Baja California, Mexico. Completed the stage of reproduction, it moves northward to British Columbia, Canada. The xantus word comes from the Hungarian ornithologist Xántus János of Vesey, who described it in specimens of Baja California in 1859.

  




       


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