Value | Position | |
---|---|---|
Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15109 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 88 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 432216 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 4/29/2024 11:05:23 AM"
1st_ Also called Hai, it was a biblical settlement destroyed by the Israelites. 2nd_ 'Ai' is the name of an island in Indonesia, also of a river in Taiwan. 3º_ In taxonomy 'Ai' is the abbreviation for the botanist Tie Min Ai . 4º_ ' . ai' is the internet domain for Anguilla . 5º_ 'AI' is an acronym for the organization "Amnesty International", and in English it is popularly used for Artificial Intelligence ("artificial intelligence", but in Spanish the acronym IA is already installed. See also A . I. (Imperial Alteza), a'i (Amazonian people), aí (animal).
1st_ Mau is a district in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. 2nd_ Mau is a town and a district in Bhind district in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh. 3º_ 'Mau' is the Egyptian name for "cat", which in Spanish is used to call cats of Egyptian breed, or any other. 4º_ 'MAU' is the IATA code for Maupiti Airport in the Leeward Islands (French Polynesia).
1st_ 'Xai' is a district in the province of Oudomxay ( Laos ). See also Xai-Xai . 2º_ 'XAI' is the acronym for Explainable Artificial Intelligence, a specialization within AI that analyzes the logic of its reasoning to monitor the possibility of bias in its conclusions. 3º_ It is also name in social networks, commercial products and a Japanese pop singer. 4º_ For some dictionary error, see also Catalan/xai .
1º_ It is a variant of the cry "os", "oss" , "oxe" that was used to scare the birds and start a hunt. The voice became popular and ended up being used to cast any animal, or as an interjection in general. See oxear . 2º_ 'OX' is an object-oriented programming language developed by Jurgen Doornik for statistical and mathematical applications. 3rd_ 'Ox' is used as an abbreviation for "oxalate". 4º_ 'Ox' is the name of a mountain range on the west coast of the Republic of Ireland. 5º_ 'Ox' was the name of a former French commune in the Haute-Garonne. 6º_ Name or nik of varied characters, of films, songs, commercial products, some geographical places that escaped me, . . . 7º_ And for some dictionary error, see also English/ox ("bovid") .
1º_ Solemnity, very ostentatious, especially in processions that follow a rite or protocol. From the Latin pomp , ae ( "procession") which takes it from the Greek 960; 959; 956; 960; 951; ( pomp? "escorted shipment" ). 2º_ By the above, it extends to any lavish representation in a ceremony or act. 3º_ Exhibition that makes the peacock of the plumage of its tail. 4º_ Bubble, rounded balloon that is formed by air enclosed in a surface that contains it without breaking. It is a variation of bomb ("balloon, round tulip") . 5º_ By similarity of appearance with the previous one, "buttock, buttock". It is used more in plural . 6º_ Round treetop. 7º_ Feminine of pomp ( "romo") .
It is "to hype oneself", in the sense of promoting oneself, of proclaiming one's virtues and values, usually to achieve a goal. It is formed by the prefix auto- ( "by itself") and bass drum (in the sense of instrument to attract attention) or perhaps pomp ( "boato") , which has some meaning as "bomb". See also give kick drum .
1º_ Usually metallic piece in the form of a somewhat conical glass containing a hammer or badajo hanging inside. The goal is to shake it so that when they hit each other they produce a sound. It is a toponym ("name related to a geographical place") as it comes from the so-called "vessel of Campania", which was made of a bronze of excellent quality. 2º_ By extension of the previous one, any cover in the form of an inverted glass to isolate or protect the contents. 3º_ It is also said of the lookout, especially of the thief who is outside the site of a robbery listening in case the police come and thus alert the rest of the gang for the escape. From the Italian jargon campane ( "ear" . 4º_ Name of several geographical places.
Architectural style that is characterized by its repetitive modular design and finish made with raw materials such as concrete, steel, exposed brick, large glazed surfaces. The name comes from the English brutalism, used in his work by the writer Peter Reyner Banham, who was inspired by the phrase béton brut ("raw concrete") with which the Franco-Swiss architect Le Corbusier described the most characteristic material of the movement.
Spanish architectural style, widely diffused at the beginning of the twentieth century as a revaluation of plateresque ("typically Spanish Renaissance style") and is a consequence of the historicist philosophical current of the late nineteenth century. It was presented by the architect José Urioste in the pavilion of the Universal Exhibition of Paris (1900). See prefix neo- ( "new" ) .