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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15237

 ValuePosition
Position22
Accepted meanings152372
Obtained votes1252
Votes by meaning0.017
Inquiries4424753
Queries by meaning297
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"Statistics updated on 5/17/2024 4:16:45 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

interoperable
  36

It can be operated or managed from various points, it is said of a system that shares data or operational information with another.

  
interétnico
  44

Relative to the exchange (cultural, genetic, commercial , . . . ) between different ethnicities. It consists of the ethnic inter- ( "between" ) prefix ( "belonging to race or ethnicity" ). See interracial, intra-ethnic ( "within the same race" ).

  
interoperabilidad
  43

Referring to several systems or equipment that are operable, it is the ability to share data and manage it with each other or control it as a whole. See inter- prefix .

  
estabo
  50

Estabo is a town and commune in Erebro Province, Sweden.

  
revenga
  66

1o_ Revenga is a municipality located in the province of Segovia, Spain. The name is associated with tempered ( "wet, exudes water") as it is a region bathed by the Cold River, with the acebeda river aqueduct (represented in two barracks of its shield), several historical pylons (watering holes), springs and streams. 2nd_ Inflection of the verb revenir . See verbs/revenga .

  
tanzania
  46

The United Republic of Tanzania (Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania, officially in South-East Africa) is an African country on the east coast in the Indian Ocean. Its name comes from the union of the first syllables of the nations that formed it in 1964: the Republic of Tanganychica and the Republic of Zanzibar.

  
fálara
  59

Fálara (Greek: 9" 945; 955; 945; 961; 945; ) is an ancient name of the village Stylida (Ftiótide, Greece) which was the port near the city of Lamia. I ignore etymology, and although it was the scene of many battles I do not think there is any relation to dented helmets or horse testers in Greek.

  
hedrada
  32

Hedrada is a town in Asturias, Spain.

  
bósforo
  50

The Bosphorus Strait is located in the city of Istanbul (Turkey), separates Asia from Europe and links the Black Sea with the Marmara Sea. According to legend, the strait was crossed by Io, Zeus' lover, turned into a cow so that it was not recognized by Hera, the prince's jealous wife. In Greek 914; 959; 963; 966; 959; 961; 959; 962; ( bosphores ) means "passage of the ox" ( or " . . . cow" ) by 946; 959; 965; 962; ( vous "ox" ) 966; 959; 961; 959; ( forum "carry, carry, transport" ).

  
bochófilo
  39

It's the name given to the "bochas player." The etymology is evident, joins bocha (ball used in that game) with the suffix -filo ( "friend, amateur") . See boccia (paralympic sport).

  
eurófilo
  36

It presents a Europhilia (in any of its meanings).

  
perjudicatario
  36

It is said of the person who receives a harm ( "damage, evil") . View Beneficiary .

  
reptilario
  38

Place of breeding or exposure of reptiles . They are usually found in zoos and research centers or wildlife repopulation.

  
ponciopilatismo
  43

It is the attitude of neglecting matters even if they are of their own business or responsibility. It has its origins in the Christian Gospels, by the name of Pontius Pilate (Latin pontius Pilatus), the Roman prefect governor of Judea before whom Jesus was accused of sedition. Despite not finding him guilty, he yielded to popular pressure and allowed him to be executed, showing the Jews - according to Matthew - the symbolic gesture of washing his hands to make it clear that he was not responsible for the death of an innocent.

  
tancredismo
  79

It is a Spanish word for a lance or show inside the bullfights where an interpreter made a "Don Tancredo", which was a kind of "living statue" on a pedestal, dressed in somewhat ridiculous and originally white clothes, standing motionless in front of the onslaught of a bull so that he believes it to be a true statue and thus avoid it instead of cornealing it. By extension it is said of the unperturbable attitude to a danger. The origin of this expression has much of a myth; it is attributed to a Spanish flag named Tancredo López who in Mexico saw an indigenous man stand motionless before a wild bull to prevent his attack, and when he returned to his homeland in the late nineteenth century perfected the technique to present himself as a bullfighting artist in the sand pretending to be a statue, and that the animal should ignore him. His career ended when he was released by one previously taught to ram a white monigoth.

  
ciberbullying
  42

Error in English cyberbullying . See cyberbullying.

  
cyberbullyng
  24

Error in English cyberbullying . See cyberbullying.

  
green washing
  40

It is not Spanish, but it is also not English, as they have an adjective greenwashing for what in our language began to be called "ecowashing".

  
ballotage
  33

Error by French ballottage ( balotaje ) .

  
suanfazon
  65

It may be an error by the French sans-faon ( "brazen, careless") or by its Castilianized version sanfasón that is already used but not yet in the English dictionary. [Note : There is an online video with an explanation referring to this word - with an accent - and the doppler in the sound of a vehicle passing at high speed; but it is not serious, it is a very berreta attempt to troll some dictionary that in the end indexes it, using ignorant people of the web to repeat it in its various forms , such as the original 'suanfonson'. And since we're at it, see also demigrating. ]

  






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