Value | Position | |
---|---|---|
Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15237 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 125 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 441980 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 5/16/2024 2:53:15 PM"
1_ Matthew is a name of Hebrew origin derived from 1502; 1514; 1514; 1497; 1492; 1493; ( Mattyiáu "gift of Yahweh" ), which has its Greek versions as 924; 945; 952; 952; 945; 953; 959; 962; ( Mattaios ) and Latin as Matthæus . See Matthias, Matute (as hypocoristic), St. Matthew. 2º_ In Argentina it was an urban car for passenger transport pulled by a horse. It comes from a play by Enrique Santos Discépolo, where a chariot horse was named Mateo. [Note: in Spain Simon is used, name of a mythical coachman of Madrid. ] See tacho . 3º_ In Chile the nerd is called that. 4º_ First (as 'I') singular person of the present of the indicative mode for the verb matear . See verbs/matthew.
1º_ It is indeed a diminutive in English of the name Thomas, but in Spanish it is used as a hypocoristic of Thomas, because its diminutive would be "Tomasito". 2nd_ 'Tommy' is the title of the fourth studio album by The Who (1969), a rock opera that was made into a film by Ken Russell in 1975.
1º_ Male name, the most famous character so called was the Roman poet Publius Virgil Maron, born in andes, author of the Aeneid and the Georgics (first century BC). C . ) . 2º_ It is the current name of the ancient Roman village of Andes, in the province of Mantua, region of Lombardy, Italy.
1º_ Clear, evident, sincere, free, without burden or encumbrance. 2º_ Belonging to Franconia, its people, its language and its conquered territories, such as present-day France. See franco- . 3º_ Name of several currencies, although today many were replaced by the euro. 4º_ Male name . It can also be surname. The origin is the Germanic frank, which has many interpretations, from the original "free", to the "honest, who says what he thinks (because he is a free man) ", and to the vagabond of Franco-German race that traveled the north of Spain, who in the war used a long spear which they called "frank"; which added to the possible meanings of the name that of "lancer of freedom".
1º_ Who lives in a city, which is related to it. 2º_ For that prejudice that supposes the inhabitant of the city as educated, and that of the countryside as rustic, it is called 'urban' to those who have good manners and comply with rules of coexistence typical of a society. See urbanity, protocol. 3º_ Urbano is also a male name of Latin origin for urbanus, i ("citizen").
1º_ People who originally inhabited the Iberian Peninsula. It is possible that the local word iber named the rivers. 2º_ Ibero, Iberian, native of Iberia in the Iberian Peninsula. 3º_ The ancient kingdom of Kartli (present-day Georgia) is also known as Iberian, because it was the way in which it was called Greeks and Romans. Today Caucasian Iberia is used to differentiate it from the Iberia of the previous meaning. 4º_ Male name, by any of the previous meanings.
It is another name for the houngan ("voodoo priest"), which has its origin in François Mackandal, a bossale ("slave brought from Africa") who promoted that religion as a form of rebellion against the oppression of whites in Haiti, in addition to using different poisons to murder slavers, so nineteenth-century French apothecaries began to call any poison 'makandal'.
1º_ Relating to reference documents, especially those that give rise to new reports, works, theses. 2º_ It is the name given to a film or series that does not show fictional recreations but real images of the events it narrates. In addition to the artistic value, they have informative and journalistic relevance. The term is attributed to the Scottish film director, producer and critic John Grierson, who gave cinema an educational character, capable of modifying society by showing it as it is.