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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15155

 ValuePosition
Position22
Accepted meanings151552
Obtained votes882
Votes by meaning0.017
Inquiries4357273
Queries by meaning297
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"Statistics updated on 5/5/2024 12:55:48 PM"




Meanings sorted by:

gotículas
  34

Version of the most used microdroplets, small droplets dispersed in the air. From Latin gutta , ae ( "drop" ) the diminutive suffix -culus or -culum .

  
yatrogénico
  54

Relative to yatrogenia, or iatrogenia.

  
naupatía
  26

In medicine is the "bad sea" , dizziness with nausea suffered by some sailors at sea. The name consists of the Greek voices 957; 945; 965; 962; ( naus "ship" ) 960; 945; 952; 959; 962; ( pathos "illness, feeling, life experience" ).

  
estrés
  46

State of extreme pressure or tension that leads to the breakdown of a material, or to the loss of mental, emotional or physical balance in living beings and that initiates defense mechanisms to recover homeostasis. It is the castellanization of the English stress ("material fatigue") that comes from the Latin stringere (stringuere "tighten, drag, raer" ).

  
hipocorística
  36

Female hypocoristic adjective .

  
morocha
  37

Female morocho.

  
ursina
  27

Female ursino (as its own noun and as an adjective).

  
eliminada
  27

1st_ Female of the deleted adjective . 2o_ Female form of the participle of the verb delete .

  
pedilona
  37

Female pedilon.

  
visionaria
  32

Female visionary. See also seer .

  
cetotariana
  29

Female primtarian. See ketogenesis.

  
ínfera
  30

Female inferno.

  
brincacharcos
  56

I want to believe that it's not a spy from an advertising agency because if you do this to promote yourself it has to be muuuy trout. It can be a colloquial way to call pants that are short, well above the ankles; as if they were rolled up their arms so as not to wet them when jumping a puddle. It could also be the Latin Spanish version of the English puddlejumper, a name with which they renamed a few small ships of the Stargate universe (sci-fi series and films for film and television) capable of jumping through the stellar portals, whose representation of the event horizon resembles a puddle.

  
pogo
  47

It is a type of dance with jumps, nudes and clash of bodies typical of musical genres such as punk or hardcore, among others. The name comes from the English pogo stick, a short stilt-shaped toy with a suspension or spring on the foot, which serves to jump while maintaining balance over it. Although originally PoGo was a brand, an acronym for the surnames of its manufacturers Max Pohlig and Ernst Gottschall.

  
comunicate
  59

Pronominal form for the second (as 'vos' ) person in singular imperative for the verb comunicar .

  
percatate
  32

Pronominal form for the second (as 'vos' ) person in singular imperative for the verb percatar .

  
cuidate
  50

Pronominal form of the second singular person (such as "vos") of the imperative for the verb care.

  
fúgate
  35

Pronominal form of the second (as 'you' ) person in singular of the imperative for the verb fugar .

  
recatate
  54

Pronominal form for the second (as 'vos' ) person in singular imperative for the verb recatar . View verbs/rescue .

  
apretarse el cinturón
  31

Tighten the belt more. It is said when there is a shortage of goods for subsistence and daily life or the means to obtain them, such as an allusion to losing weight by having to eat less. It is to make a drastic reduction in expenses, where "tightening" better expresses the idea than "adjusting".

  






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