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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 125191 8 Queries by meaning 32 20 Feed + Pdf

"Statistics updated on 6/30/2024 9:17:45 PM"




el tato
  45

He was a Sevillian bullfighter of the second half of the nineteenth century, recognized especially in Madrid for his ability to kill the bull to the volapié and for his fondness for the holidays and saraos. It has been left in the popular imagination in expressions such as "not yet the Tato has come" to express strangeness for the lack of attendance or "it is more famous than the Tato". It was caught in 1969 in Madrid by a bull of the run that tried to solemnize the promulgation of the new Spanish Constitution after the September Revolution also called Gloriosa or Septembrina.

  
sustanciero
  28

Office, now disappeared, of the years of hunger and misery of our post-war period which they also called savor. "The suso has arrived." Thus was announced this character that he had tied with a rope a ham or cow bone that he introduced by a fat bitch for a few minutes in the pout of the poor or by a peseta for a quarter of an hour. It remained until the 1960s.

  
quiliasta
  76

From Greek chilia, a thousand. Defender of millennialism or chyliasm, a belief originated in the book of Revelation, that Christ will reign in the world for a thousand years before the end. From the beginning of Christianity it was thought that this parusia would be imminent. Many sects especially within the reformist orientation continue to announce it and some walking preachers now too. Even Kant himself, educated in Pietism, admitted this 18th-century belief in "Ideas for a Universal History in Cosmopolitan Key".

  
taboritas
  58

Radical political-religious movement of the Husita Reformation of Bohemia (in the present Czech Republic) in the fifteenth century, originating in the city of Tabor, name they took from the passage of the synoptics that speaks of the transfiguration of Christ on Mount Tabor. They abolished private property and rejected any religious hierarchy. In the early sixteenth century they created the Unitas Fratrum, the base church of the later Brotherhood of Moravia.

  
intersubjetividad
  33

Intersubjectivity. My reflection is subjective. For philosophy knowledge is always a relationship between a subject and an object. Even modernity accepted that the subject could know the object. Not then. The subject does not know the object itself. He changes it, adapts it, subjectizes it. Knowledge is subjective. Solution proposed by the Fenomenology of Husserl in the first decades of the twentieth century: intersubjectivity, the agreement in which we converge the different "I" in the worldview, which implies a certain common sense and the selfless acceptance of scientific knowledge that does not accept privileges from anyone. A mode of intersubjectivity with an acceptable meaning of the real gives us the Dictionary despite our more or less interested subjectivities not only theoretical but above all practical-transformatives of the world.

  
joder la marrana
  64

Popular expression not exactly elegant that means to annoy, disturb, incorodyate, break the tranquility of any situation, expression reminiscent of the Arab Ferris islands of our horticultural past. Our own Open Dictionary collects the meaning of Marrana in its second meaning as the axis of the Ferris wheel. Well, one way to annoy the waterer was to put a stick or a stone in the gears of the remaining Ferris wheel, no matter how much the donkey threw away.

  
fraternulian
  32

It would be the third person of the plural of present indicative verb fraternuliar , which I think is not listed in the Dictionary , unless it is in the Glíglyco of Cortázar . It looks all the way, but I'm not sure, that it could mean fraternizing, feeling united and treating someone like a brother.

  
tetrápilo
  35

From Greek tetra ( tettara ), four and pylon, door, entrance, (four doors). They also call it tetrapilon. The Romans called him jano in reference to the bifronte god Janus, that of the gates and of the month of January. These are ancient quadrifront monuments originating in the Hellenistic period with an arch-door on each side. They used to stand at the crossroads. I want to highlight the traticl arch of the Roman city of Capera (Cáparra) on the via la Plata caceres .

  
cáparra
  25

Roman city located on the Silver Road a few kilometers north of the Caceres city of Plasencia. In ancient times they also called it Capara and Capera. Ptolemy calls it Capasa placing it in veton territory, although it was possibly on the border with the Lusitanians.

  
isoglosa
  26

From the greek adjective isos , equal and the noun glossa , language , language . An imaginary geographical line separating two areas in which specific dialectal linguistic features, usually phonetic, such as the silting or aspirated pronunciation of the s preceding another consonant between the provinces of Albacete and Cuenca are distinguished. The expression "is that" with which an apology is usually initiated, the executor pronounce it "e.g." softening "short" the jack.

  
las trece rosas
  24

Collective appeal given to a group of women, nine of them minors, shot in our last dictatorship as "responsible for a crime of accession to rebellion" in August 1939 after the end of the war. Most of them were dressmakers and the Socialist Youth.

  
agua de melisa
  29

Melissa officinalis hydrolate, aromatic plant of lemon smell and flavor. People also use the Arabic name of toronjil, lemongrass, cidronela, toronja or toronjina. It is often used for its anti-inflammatory, soothing and soothing properties of the skin.

  
res nullius
  65

Legal Latinism : nobody's thing. This expression indicates that one thing is not owned by anyone, nor has it ever been. It differs from the res derelicta in that in the latter, abandoned thing, the owner renounces his property.

  
res derelicta
  33

In Law, an abandoned thing, which has been owned by someone who has given up to continue owning it, allowing someone else to acquire it by occupation.

  
isabel zendal gómez
  22

It has up to 35 different names this Galician, first nurse on international mission. With the physician Francisco Xavier Balmis he cared in the Philanthropic Expedition of the Vaccine of 1803 to the children who carried on their skin renewing it every 10 days the smallpox vaccine. In Puerto Rico, Mexico and the Philippines, about 250 were vaccinated. 000 people. We need to know how to value those who really deserve recognition.

  
operación balmis
  25

This is what the Spanish Ministry of Defense calls the military operation against the coronavirus pandemic, in memory of the "Balmis Expedition" that spread the smallpox vaccine throughout America and Asia in the early 19th century. It was directed by the acannian botanist and surgeon Francisco Javier de Balmis y Berenguer who had previously worked in Havana and Mexico City. The 2016 TVE film "22 Angels", in memory of the children who carried the vaccine, reminds us of these facts.

  
dehiscencia
  39

From the Latin verb dehisco, open, open, crack . In Botany is the opening of certain reproductive structures of plants to release pollen or seeds, which usually get partly dehydrated those structures as happens in the galbies of cypresses.

  
quejaritomene
  45

Medium-passive participle of perfect in feminine greek verb jaritomai , rejoice, be cheerful, be beautiful, charis charitos , grace, joy, charm, beauty. This is what St. Luke calls in Greek the mother of Christ in the passage of the Annunciation : Jaire, complaintritomene , salve, beautiful, full of grace. The exegetes Catholics translate sinless, full of grace. We prefer beautiful, funny, lovely woman.

  
anakinra
  28

Medication that is currently being used in 10 Spanish hospitals in the most severe cases of coronavirus in the hope that it will be effective. Until now it was used against rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. It is an anti-inflammatory drug, an interleukina-1 antagonist that triggers the famous cytokine storm in some patients with strong and dangerous inflammation of the lungs. I hope you're lucky.

  
a que no hay huevos
  45

An unhealthy expression typical of a macho bluff, as if wanting to say: You dare not make a greater savagery than I have done! The semantic context here is very close to the content. I would be equal to say : You are cowards, a few chickens. The expression is shaped like a group challenge in a gang of Navajeros.

  




       


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