Dictionary
 Open and Collaborative
 Home page

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 14965 19 Queries by meaning 40 5305 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 5/18/2024 10:43:44 PM"




dolce far niente
  30

Italian expression which literally means "sweet doing nothing," which is fairly explicit. The term «dolce» adjective means sweet, the syncopated Italian verb 'fare', from Latin 'facere': do, and the indeterminate pronoun «niente» means nothing, from the Latin «nec entem»: no entity, not be. Synonyms: weak, lazy, idle, idle, lazy, lazy drone.

  
que significa hiperbatica
  25

1. Affected ( 41 grammatical sentence; by Hyperbaton: figure of speech by which altered the normal sequence of the components of the prayer. Example: 'Again the dark swallows on your balcony nests hang' (Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer ). Hyperbaton: neutral fervently of the Greek prefix 'úper': on beyond and the verb «bainein»: walking, go. 2. Very deep. The prefix «úper» and the term «bathús» adjective: deep. 3. Predominant mineral species.

  
conjunto de la flora y fauna
  21

Biota. It comes from the Greek «bíos»: life. Living animals and plants from any locality?? Way of life and livelihood of these beings.

  
que es ictiologico
  23

Ictiológico. Derived from ' ichthýs, ichthýos ': ( nominative and genitive singular of ) fish, «logos»: tried "ica": relative to.

  
eliseos
  18

Elysian. Plural of Elysium, referred to "Champs Elysées": delicious place, happiness, destiny of souls of the good. According to Homer, generous region located in the West of the Earth, the ocean, brimming with gifts, without cold, snow or rain: Perpetual spring, where, without having died, dwelled elected heroes. The word comes from the Greek 'elúsion' ( «»«pedíon» ): ( 41 fields; Elysian.

  
parágrafo
  24

Paragraph. By syncopation of the letters do ág does and accentuation of the first do to do, the paragraph word derives from paragraph. 1 Is a fragment of a letter, whose initial letter of the first line should be capitalized, and the end is symbolized with point and separate. 2 Sign §, representative of this section of text. The origin of this word is from the Greek preposition «pará»: together with the substantive «graphós», from the verb «gráphein»: write.

  
hialina
  49

This diction is derived from the Greek adjective «ualinós»: vitreous of the substantive «úalos»: glass. 1. Masculine adjective of hyaline, meaning transparent. 2 Noun. Substance albuminoide translucent, caused by amyloid degeneration. 3 Substance nitrogen constituent quitinoide main walls of cysts hidátidos ( as in the 41 had;. To break down generates a sugar. 4. Transparent substance that accumulates in cells lathe, susceptible to staining with eosin. By splitting it originates a carbohydrate.

  
positronico
  22

Positronic. Concerning the Positron: antimatter from the electron or Positron. The mass of the electron is virtually non-existent. Its electric charge is the unitary refusal: - 1. Therefore the mass of the Positron is also zero, and its electric charge is the unitary positive: 1, which annihilates the electron. The name comes from 'positive'.

  
mesofilo
  33

Is derived from the Greek "mesos": medium, and «phýllon»: leaf. Tissues and nerves located between the back ( 41 upper side; and backwards ( 41 lower lamina; the plant leaves.

  
trofismo
  26

1. State of nutrition of tissues and organs. 2. Confrontation of the nutritive functions by the nervous system. Is derived from the Greek «trophée»: food, nutrition, and the suffix "ISM", from the Latin "ismus", and Greek 'ismós', which means status, quality, physical or moral deficiencies, doctrine, social movement, trend, sporting activities, etc.

  
leonidas
  23

Leonidas. 1. King of Sparta ( 491-480 BC ). With 300 Spartans and about 1000 partners, over two days, he defended the pass of Thermopylae against the Persian army of Xerxes. Greek treason Ephialtes perished all the Spartans and 700 allies. In his "history" Herodotus describes this acontecimiento.2. Plural noun. Profusion ( «»«rain» ) Lion ) appears in November, from the constellation Leo ( Meteor that often for 33 years. They are meteorites that revolve around the Sun, generated by disintegration of comets.

  
esopo
  52

Aesop. Greek fabulist, died about the year 570 BC. It is a synonym of fable, is presumed author of 40 to 200 compositions of this kind, of which include "the Hare and the turtle" and "the Wolf and the Lamb".

  
comodatario
  25

Who receives property under contract. This word is the past participle of the Latin verb «commodare»: provide, to facilitate. Consist in celebration of a repo deal, properties of real roots, conditioned to certain uses and obligation to restore it to the expiration of the term. Who gives is «comodante».

  
contratenor
  28

1. Unusual voice of tenor range and tessitura. 2 Man endowed with this voice. 3 One of the parties mean musical between tenor and soprano.In medieval polyphonic compositions was the voice that made counterpoint to the of tenor, complementary to the other voices.

  
planctofago
  31

Planctófago. That feeds on plankton. It comes from the Greek 'planktón', neutral of «planktós»: Wanderer, vagabond, and «fagein»: eat. Plankton is comprised of plant organisms and animals floating or weakly swimmers. It includes seaweed - mainly Sargasso, covering large expanses of ocean - ( 41 microscopic diatoms; and ( macroscopic ) jellyfish.

  
antropogenico
  23

Anthropogenic. Generated ( caused ) by man, the human being. Is derived from the Greek 'ánthropos': 'genes', man: birth, and 'ica': on a. is commonly used in pejorative sense to refer to adverse changes in the nature, motivated by presence and human activities.

  
disoluto
  52

Masculine term adjective. Means would in licentious habits, vicious do.?? Derived from the verb dissolve: consists of the nominal prefix and verbal 'dis': contrast, denial, and «solute', past participle of the Latin verb «solvere»: unleash, unlock, liquefy.

  
post meridiem
  28

Post meridiem. «Post» Latin: then, later, and 40 meridianus; meri derived from medius: medium, and dies: day ). Meridian past: after noon ( between 12: 00 and 24: 00 hours ). Meridian means southern, South, Southern.

  
dpd
  24

DPD. Dictionary Pan-Hispanic of doubts. Edited by the Royal Spanish Academy and the Association of academies of the Spanish language. Collaboration of the Instituto Cervantes. Santillana Ediciones generals, S. l., 2005.

  
sigilo
  62

Stealth. It comes from the Latin sigillum, sigilli ( nominative and genitive of singular ) diminutive of signum: sign. Seal, mark. Popularly means discretion, caution, reserve and secrecy.

  




       


This website uses your own and third party cookies to optimize your navigation, adapt to your preferences and perform analytical work. As we continue to navigate, we understand that you accept our Cookies Policies