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Spanish Open dictionary by Felipe Lorenzo del Río



Felipe Lorenzo del Río
  3887

  Value Position Position 9 9 Accepted meanings 3887 9 Obtained votes 132 9 Votes by meaning 0.03 20 Inquiries 124975 8 Queries by meaning 32 20 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 6/26/2024 5:19:52 PM"




muchismo
  54

Syncopation of the superlative a lot. In the shadow of the accent the second i tends to disappear by economy or phonetic ease , which has happened with some frequency in the evolution of our language

  
módulo de respeto
  28

Prison intervention program focused on values, habits and attitudes, based on group work, voluntary participation and coexistence in mutual respect, led by educators in a dynamic of positive pressure on responsibility and mutual support for social reintegration.

  
tempranillo
  28

Diminutive of early . Spanish red grape variety that ripens before the others, which creates good wines with body and with many appellations of origin, also called tempranilla, tinta del país and cencibel. Nickname of José Pelagio Hinojosa Cobacho, bandit of Cordoba of the nineteenth century in Sierra Morena. José María el Tempranillo, condemned to death and pardoned, died fighting against the bandits.

  
hízome
  43

Enclitic pronouns are not usually used except in the verb forms of the infinitive, the gerund and the imperative, unless we have some fixed expression of the type : You will have seen such stupidity! It is an archaic form widely used by our classics of the golden age that today is not forbidden either.

  
origen linguistico de la palabra murcielago
  41

It is a consolidated metathesis in the time of bat, term from the Latin mur caecus, which in ancient Castilian gave bat (blind mouse) that still exists, the same as the diminutive murceguillo. What I would not know how to say what is easier to pronounce : whether bat or bat . But in this as in many other things people (the use) decide .

  
antrópico
  45

Adjective used in the scientific fields, derived from anthropos, man with the suffix -ico of relationship . It is said of everything modified or generated by human activity in the natural environment.

  
piedralipe
  144

In my land asturleonese is thus called copper sulfate, calcanite, blue vitrilum, blue stone that crushed and dissolved in water was sprinkled on the cereal that was used in the sow against fungi especially fog, anublo, blyce or rust (puccinia graminis). It has also been used as a algicide in swimming pools and as a pesticide in bordelés broth in disinfection of vines and other plantations. In my childhood when the pigs were layered in the corral, that blue-green powder was applied that was fastened with two pieces of cane sewn into the wound

  
palilogía
  36

Rhetorical figure of emphasis, from Greek palin, again and logos, word, reason, speech. Repetition of a word or expression, at the beginning and end of a sentence. Like in "green I love you green", or "that by May it was for May, when it's hot". He is also a repeating musical figure

  
anti-evo
  21

I suppose Evo Morales, Bolivia's former legitimate president, is referred to, overthrown in coup by Bolivia's rightful forces, led by Trump and supported by the un decent OAS to exploit lithium. Opponents of Evo, such as those opposed to Maduro, will continue to try to maintain their privileges so that nothing changes in the 21st century. They are also doing so by manipulating citizens' consciences with the media by making us lose class consciousness.

  
en un periquete
  41

Modal adverbial expression, perhaps repiquete metastases, as the chime of bells always has good rhythm and short duration, although some point to the origin in another direction. Quickly, in a two by three, in a peep, in a heartbeat, unless you sing a rooster, very soon.

  
espejunaban
  39

Third plural person of the imperfect indicative preterite of the verb espejunar of the Glyglyc language of Cortazarian creation of the novel Rayuela; a cryptic, erotic and open-acting language that Julio Cortázar shared in complicity with his literary characters. In the expression of the cap. 68 : "Feeling how little by little the harnesses were mirrored", which is part of the description of a sexual encounter, some interpret that the knees separated. Other interpretations say that the veins contracted. Imagination is free.

  
poena cullei
  40

Death penalty of the sack that applied in ancient Rome to the parricides. They were put in a sack, made with the skin of an ox, which had previously been used to transport wine, in the company of a snake, a dog, a monkey and a rooster and thrown into the sea or into a river. However, the Romans' preferred penalty was crucifixion.

  
che cazzo te ne frega
  66

Very popular expression and somewhat vulgar Italians equivalent to our What the hell do you care? or even more vulgar What the fuck do you care? What do you care?. Expressions with which we express some discomfort or annoyance with our interlocutor when interested in matters that do not concern him.

  
culebra caligulense
  110

Coluber caligulensis, so the Romans called the common eel or European eel (anguilla anguilla ) by the character of Emperor Caligula to this dish from his military campaign to Britain in which he only reached the shores of Normandy with 200. 000 legionnaires who ordered to collect shells on the beaches to return to Rome with that spoils of war.

  
coripeño
  46

Gentile of Coripe Sevillian municipality on the border with Cadiz in which historical citation was given the Turdetans, Greeks, Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Romans, Visigoths and Muslims. Its toponymic name derives from corrivium (river of streams) by the confluence of the Guadalporcún and Guadalete rivers. A few kms from this confluence took place the Battle of Guadalete, one of the milestones of our history.

  
conmilitón
  41

From Latin commilito -onis (cum thousands, soldier accompanying another, comrade-in-arms), comrade, comrade-in-arms in war or army and by extension, comrade in any other joint activity.

  
leontodon
  60

From Greek leon leontos, lion and odon dentists, tooth : Dandelion, genus of herbaceous plants of the asteraceae family with many species of toothed leaves. Interestingly the plant popularly known as dandelion, bitter chicory, bitterness, lechiriega, hair. . . it is not now named after taraxacum officinale which derives from the Arabic tharakhchakon, bitter grass, similar to lettuce.

  
maribárbola
  55

In Asturleonés Maria Barbara. Thus they called María Bárbara Asquín, the dwarf that appears in the foreground on the right after a mastiff in the Meninas de Velázquez, a painting that at first was instituted Portrait of the Lady Empress with her ladies and a dwarf; in the eighteenth century, the family of Lord King Phelipe Quarto and then the Family. In the Secret of Maribárbola a Spanish journalist fondly recreates this character of our culture.

  
casca
  67

Apocope of shell in my asturleonese land, the bark of the trees, the mondadura of some fruits such as apple or orange, the wrapping of certain fruits such as walnut or egg shell.

  
escascar
  37

In my land, simplification of peeling by phonetic vagrancy as happens in the suffixes -ado of the participles, descorte branches or trunks of trees, remove the shell from fruits or fruits.

  




       


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