Value | Position | |
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Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15254 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 125 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 444075 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 5/18/2024 7:12:58 AM"
1º_ It is a neologism invented from a Spanish television program called 'Women and men and vice versa' to find a partner. Whoever chooses it is placed in a seat similar to a throne and that is why it is called 'tronista'; and from there it can be applied to different situations that are associated with it at some point. See triumph. 2º_ Person who thunders ("sound thunder, explosion or break" ), in the sense of ruining, spoiling.
It is said of the Native American, the native inhabitant, and everything related to him. It has an etymology that comes from Amerindian English, although for the Americans who call their country America they would be the natives of their territory. While it is evident that the word is composed of American Indian the origin is a bit convoluted, and begins with Christopher Columbus' insistence that the continent discovered by his expedition was actually part of the East Indies, which motivated the Spanish to call its inhabitants "Indians"; and the name remained generating confusion with those born in the real India, which led to the creation of variants like this to differentiate them. See Hindu, Hindu.
Without prejudice to the correction of colleague John Rene Plaut, 'prefuturous' is a word used in various commercial, artistic, dissemination contexts; It even existed as a foundation in Colombia and was a contraction of "Preparing the Future", a method shared by more companies and institutions with names such as "Preuniversitario Futuro" or "forecast of the future". Pre- ("anterior to") is a very common particle in Spanish. See future ("time after today").
It has two interpretations. When there is a limited number of products offered (p. e.g. seats for a show) and sell more than the total stock or capacity, usually assuming that not all buyers are going to show up. Or when a buyer has already decided to acquire the product or service, but the seller keeps insisting as if he still has to convince him. It is formed by the prefix over- ("superior, surplus, above") sell ("offer a good for purchase").