Value | Position | |
---|---|---|
Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15109 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 88 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 432221 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 4/29/2024 11:27:51 AM"
It is the study and analysis of collective ignorance, especially that provoked by media, urban myths, superstitions. It is a field of sociology, but also of politics and marketing since ignorance is usually a tool of control and manipulation, and for the creation of wide market niches. It is a voice that looks like an oxymoron, formed by the Greek 945; 947; 957; 969; 963; 953; 962; ( agnosis "doubt , ignorance") 955; 959; 947; 953; 945; ( lodge "study, knowledge") .
1º_ Coffin, coffin in which the corpses are placed for burial. The name comes from the Latin sarcophagus , which takes it from the Greek 963; 945; 961; 958; ( sarx , "meat") 966; 945; 947; 949; 953; 957; (fagein, "eat") and it is a somewhat poetic way of calling some limestone boxes that decomposed the bodies of the deceased more quickly than other materials. See sarc- , lucilo . 2º_ By the above, any cover or container for elements or waste that must be permanently isolated. 3º_ Name vulgarized for the genus of insects sarcophagus, which lay their eggs in decomposed bodies to serve as food for their larvae.
It is said of the marriage of a cleric, something that used to happen in the Catholic Church despite the vow of chastity. While clergy (hierarchy and group of clerics) comes to us from Latin, the origin is in the Greek 954; 955; 951; 961; 959; 962; ( kleros , "part of a territory administered by clerigos") 947; 945; 956; 949; 969; ( gameo "marriage union") . See Nicolaism , clerophobia .
It is a demonstration in public places, as a blow of effect, of greengrocers, distributors of vegetables and / or farmers to make visible a claim of their sector. They usually sell their products at cost, when they don't give them away. And it can also be more literally a blow given with some vegetable, like those thrown at a bad artist or speaker on a stage.
If it is not a piece of text (out of place as a dictionary query), it is an error for "Stupid!" , which would be "stupid" used as an exclamation. See exclamative sentence and also the definitions in errors 10060;exclamation marks and 10060;exclamation mark [sorry, but it is what there is, none have to date of this publication a link to the correct entry] .
Let's see if we guess where this spawn comes from. It may be a mistake for icing sugar ("impalpable sugar") , which would be what in French is called glace (glas "snowy" ); but it could also be a half-baked translation of the English sugar glass that is used for special effects, since it looks like a real glass cloth, but in truth it is made with sugar and the stunts in the movies can go through them (p. and. in a window) without risk of being cut as with a real glass.