S Logo
 Dictionary
 Open and Collaborative
 Home page

Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15131

 ValuePosition
Position22
Accepted meanings151312
Obtained votes882
Votes by meaning0.017
Inquiries4340073
Queries by meaning297
Feed + Pdf Follow the furoya dictionary updates through this feed using any of the existing free feed readersFollow the furoya dictionary updates through this pdf using any of the existing free pdf readers

"Statistics updated on 5/2/2024 11:25:41 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

exalcalde
  50

It is said of a mayor when he is removed from office. See ex- ( prefix "outside") .

  
exsenador
  40

He was a senator but no longer holds that position. See ex- prefix.

  
exesposo
  41

He ceases to be a husband, is used as an ex-husband, although by his etymology he would be an "ex-promise".

  
exmarido
  36

He's already stopped being someone's husband. Male who ended a marital bond. See ex- prefix, exsposo .

  
excapitán
  34

He was captain, but he's already retired from office. See the prefix ex- .

  
exmandatario
  52

It is said of the one who has concluded the term for which he was elected. See ex- prefix, representative.

  
exoficial
  42

It is used in people, when they leave the position of officer. See ex- ( prefix ) .

  
excolonia
  25

It is said of the emancipated territory, which ceases to be the colony of an empire. See the prefix ex- .

  
arala
  41

In addition to the mudra jasta, Buddhist or Hinduist, and the Indian location already mentioned in this post, 'arala' is also a pronominal form for the second (as 'vos') person in singular imperative form of the verb arar . See verbs/ará .

  
subyugadla
  43

Pronominal form of the second (such as 'you' ) plural person of the imperative for the verb subyugar . See verbs/subyugad .

  
castigadla
  43

Pronominal form of the second (such as 'you' ) plural person of the imperative for the verb punish . See verbs/punish .

  
sometedla
  56

Pronominal form for the second (such as 'you' ) plural person of the imperative for the verb submit . See verbs/someted .

  
enaltecedla
  40

Pronominal form for the second (such as 'you' ) plural person of the imperative for the verb enaltecer . See verbs/enalteced .

  
dejala
  48

Pronominal form for the second (such as 'vos' ) person in singular imperative form for the verb leave . See verbs/leave .

  
libertadla
  44

Pronominal form for the second (such as 'you' ) plural person of the imperative for the verb libertar . See verbs/freedom .

  
conténgala
  33

Pronominal form for the third (such as 'he/she') persons in singular of the present subjunctive mode, and second (as 'you') person in singular imperative for the verb contain . See verbs/contain .

  
nickname
  17

In Spanish nickname translates as "nickname, alias" and is especially used to identify in virtual communities. The origin is in the old phrase an eke-name , which was formed by article an ( "un" ), the Germanic adverb eke ( "in addition") and the noun name ( "name") . Over time, when the use of that adverb was lost, the phrase was interpreted as 'a nickname', from where 'nickname' came from.

  
eurofobismo
  35

I do not like to endorse these neologisms with a definition, but if Europhobia is accepted as a political fear of approaching or joining the European Community, 'Europhobicism' will have to be understood as a doctrine that promotes it.

  
neuromito
  45

It is a neologism to name the wrong beliefs about the functioning of the brain and nervous system, especially when they are accepted and disclosed by teachers. It was first mentioned by English neurosurgeon Alan Crockard as neuromyth, and is formed by the prefix neuro- (relative to nerves) myth.

  
sinhogar
  42

It should be an attempt to castilian the English homeless, and it would not be an incorrect construction, there is already a history of 'without' a noun (endless, sinhueso, countless, . . . ) that are installed. Although there are alternatives used in each country, the truth is that none were yet imposed.

  






Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Facebook  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Twitter  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Google+  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on feed