Value | Position | |
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Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15230 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 125 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 441361 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 5/15/2024 12:57:04 PM"
1º_ Specifically it is a phobia of the bite of a stinger with poison. While the origin is in the Greek 954; 957; 953; 948; 951; (knidé "nettle") and refers to the stinging spines of that plant, the term is extended to insects, arachnids and aquatic animals such as aguavivas. See cnidario . 2º_ It is also said to be a phobia of chains, and by extension of strings. The problem I have in leaving you with this etymology is that I do not recognize it; I looked at a couple of dictionaries and I can't find it either. Making a (very) free association it occurs to me that in the nettles there are many caterpillars, some butterfly larvae also with poisonous thorns; and as the movement of these bugs inspired a manufacturer of off-road work vehicles that he called Caterpillar ("caterpillar", in English) that move on endless chains that are affirmed on the ground when rolling, perhaps the association will come there. Although now that I think about it, they are not really chains of fastening 128533; . See -phobia, bulldozer.
It is a word composed of another compound word. It is called a mirror mirror that in vehicles allows you to see back from it, and is especially useful for counter-march maneuvers. Today there is this more sophisticated version that uses cameras and video monitors, and that was baptized as 'video reviewer'. It is formed by the Latin voices video, retro-, viewer.
1º_ Cutout of paper, fabric, cardboard with an inscription or identification that is placed on an object. See marbete, badge. 2º_ By the previous one, identification, classification, stereotype that is made of something or someone. 3º_ Adjustment to the rules of ceremonial or education for each situation. 4º_ Inflection of the verb label . See verbs/label .
It does not exist and surely will not exist officially in Spanish as "robar", unless it is somehow associated with "pudding" (with another meaning) and not the name of a Colombian minister accused of embezzlement of state funds. It is another popular invention that circulates in the networks. See carmelear .
It's a neologism for multimedia content that produces some kind of addiction, such as social media catching its users, who feel they can't stop checking them. A more specific case is the providers of videos, images or news, which are specially designed to capture attention and that users do not leave their platforms. It is formed by the prefix info- (for "information") and dopamine, a neurotransmitter hormone that is popularly more associated with sensations in the reward state, the pleasure you feel when getting something.
After World War II many nazi hierarchs and criminals escaped Germany and went into hiding under false identities. But private or Israeli government-created groups set about hunting them all over the world, especially those who were responsible in the 'Jewish Holocaust' and were not protected by foreign governments, in order to bring them to trial. These 'Nazi hunters' were very active during the second half of the twentieth century. The neologism is a word formed by Hunting ("hunter, hunting") Nazi ("member of the National Socialist German Party"); and is used equally in the singular as in the plural.
It is a political or social activism through computer networks taking advantage of vulnerabilities in the systems of governments or entities that threaten its causes. While their actions are not always criminal, in many cases they make public private or sensitive information for a State, and that can be considered illegal so there is an ethical discussion about whether it is right to report a serious crime committing another minor one. The neologism is an acronym for hacker activism.
It is a neologism created in Spain for a graphical measurement of the number of people out of work in the country. It is formed by unemployment ("lack of work occupation") the suffix -meter ("measurement"). [Note: In this dictionary they have the bad habit of defining in the written queries with errors, as if everyone should look for an answer by typing badly; and the problem is that many times the correct or more detailed answer is right there. I regret having to put this link, but in the 10060;parometro the colleague José Luis Sánchez Abela left much more data (untestable, but interesting) about the voice 'parómetro'. ]