Value | Position | |
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Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15179 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 88 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 437499 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 5/9/2024 2:02:58 AM"
In addition to the Latinized Greek anagram 'XP' (Equis Pe ), by ' 935; 929;' ( Chi Rho ) for chrism or chrismon , is also the name of a version of the Windows operating system available between 2001 and 2014 where XP evokes the word experience ( "experience" ) , and in addition XP is an emoticon that represents a face with eyes closed and a tongue out to one side, which can be interpreted as the emoji "tasting" (128523; ) , such as "with eyes closed and tongue out" ( 1285) ) or perhaps as "dizzy" (128565; ) .
To be a literal phrase, "tattooing [on] the vagina" seems difficult to practice. It would be more believable if it referred to "tattooing [a design of] the vagina," though it's still complicated. On the other hand, as a locution, it can be interpreted as "marking a man to a woman (in a sexual sense) as one's own", as explained by colleague Iván Higuera. See vulva .
1º_ Expression that is used in the card game tute to get the 40 points with the decks king and horse of the same suit of triumph. 2º_ Related to the previous one, it is said "to sing the forties" when someone is reprimanded taking a place of superiority, when he is thrown in the face of a fault, or a triumph of his own.
In this case the "throw" is for "shooting", and the phrase refers to the fact of "waste, waste goods that are not their own". There are several anecdotes as the origin of this locution but most mention the fact of Spanish Tercios soldiers saving ammunition and gunpowder in a siege until they capture the enemy powder keg, and already with the supply covered by "the king's gunpowder" (which they did not pay) the arquebusiers did not skimp on the amount of shots.
The expression "to call bread, bread and wine, wine" means "to call things by their name, without detours or unnecessary explanations." It does not have a clear origin, but there are apocryphal anecdotes that relate it to the Catholic liturgy, where the consecrated bread and wine represent the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ, and naming them would give greater weight to the assertion.
This is a locution aimed almost exclusively at women who remain single. It comes from a custom in Catholic churches, which had religious images of the Virgin and saints to wear, to change their clothes according to the occasion; And that work along with other administrative or cleaning collaborations used to be done by ladies of the parishioners who had no commitments in their homes, elderly widows, with children already married or spinsters. See other versions already published as stay to dress images, stay to dress saints a woman.
1º_ Common name of several plants Fragaria and its fruits. See strawberry . 2º_ Type of wick turned with edges to shape the holes in the metal. The appearance resembles that of the fruit. 3º_ It is an Americanism for the person -especially if he is a woman, young and upper class- presumptuous, who dresses and behaves according to fashion. Also their acts and consumptions. Wikipedia mentions an origin in the Olympic Games of Mexico in 1968, where hostesses were hired for the stadiums among students of expensive universities, for wealthy people, and dressed in white with designs and colors according to each discipline, but with a logo or strawberry red badge as identification. 4º_ Inflection of the verb mill . See verbs/strawberry .
1º_ Escardillo, tool in the form of a shovel or hoe that allows digging with more precise cuts in the ground. From the Latin sappa , ae with the same meaning . 2º_ Trench or trench dug with the shoe tool. 3º_ Inflection of the verb zapar . See verbs/zapa . 4º_ Granulated format on a surface, similar to that of sandpaper. It is said more in carving of skins or metals. The name should be inspired by the rough skin of some epiid animals. 5º_ Apocope of shoe or slipper.
1º_ Tool with two moving tips that come together and allow you to take an object. 2º_ Extremity in some animals with two pieces as a grasping device. 3º_ It is also associated with its effect, and is called pincer to the pinching of a cloth where two sheets are sewn together, or in a battle to strategies where an army is divided into two parts and surrounds another on both sides. 4º_ Inflection of the verb pinch . See verbs/pincers.