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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15179

 ValuePosition
Position22
Accepted meanings151792
Obtained votes882
Votes by meaning0.017
Inquiries4369993
Queries by meaning297
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"Statistics updated on 5/8/2024 7:00:30 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

jinetas
  5

1º_ Plural of rider . 2º_ Plural of the feminine of rider. See jinetero .

  
multicolores
  8

Plural of multicolored ("of many different colors").

  
canilleras
  8

Plural of canillera (in its various meanings).

  
mindangos
  4

Plural of mindango ("gandul").

  
ecorregiones
  4

Plural of ecoregion ("neologism for 'ecological region'").

  
necrofobia
  8

It is the irrational fear of death and especially corpses. It comes from the Greek 957; 949; 954; 961; 959; 962; ( nekrós , "dead, corpse" ) 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; ( fovos "fear" ) .

  
amaxofobia
  5

It is the fear of rolling vehicles, and also of driving them. It consists of the Greek voices 945; 956; 945; 958; 945; ( ámaxa "chariot" ) 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; ( fovos "fear" ) .

  
agorafobia
  4

It is the fear of open, outdoor places; But it is also understood as the fear of crowds, of a conglomeration of people. And it is because it comes from the Greek 945; 947; 959; 961; 945; ( agorá "square for public meetings" ) which brings together both concepts, to which was added the suffix -fobia ("fear"). See agora .

  
aracnofobia
  5

Fear of spiders, scorpions, and perhaps mites. The etymology comes from the Greek words 945; 961; 945; 967; 957; 949; ( arachne "spider" ) and 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; ( fovos "fear" ) . See entomophobia. I know a psychologist who treated my mother when she suffered from arachnophobia.

  
blenofobia
  4

It is the irrational fear of mucus, a viscous substance such as mud or cream. It comes from the Greek 946; 955; 949; 957; 957; 959; 962; ( blennos "mucus" ) 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; ( fovos "fear" ) . See belonephobia ("fear of sharp objects").

  
didascaleinofobia
  6

It is the fear of going to school, to teachers and professors. It comes from the Greek 948; 953; 948; 945; 963; 954; 945; 955; 959; 962; ( didáscalos "who teaches" ) 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; ( fovos "fear" ) .

  
escolionofobia
  5

It is the irrational fear of school, of their classes. It comes from the Greek 963; 967; 959; 955; 951; ( scholé "school, in the sense of philosophical or rhetorical debate" ) 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; ( fovos "fear" ) .

  
aporofobia
  5

It is the pathological fear of poverty, of the destitute. Also the rejection of the lower social classes, although this belongs more to the field of sociology than to psychology. It is formed by the Greek times 945; 960; 959; 961; 949; 969; ( aporéoo "to lack, to doubt") 966; 959; 946; 959; 962; ( fovos "fear" ) . See orthophobia.

  
vicero
  11

Pastor of vicera; They took turns taking the cattle of all the neighbors to graze.

  
castel
  6

Archaism by castle ("fortified building").

  
estajo
  5

1º_ Archaism by "shortcut" . 2º_ It is a vulgarism by piecework ("work done therefore, by quantity, and not by wages"), with the /d/ aspirated, which is lost in the transliteration.

  
harda
  13

Former name for the squirrel (Sciuridae vulgaris). See arda .

  
cangrena
  6

Archaic form of the word gangrene ("part of dead and putrefying tissue in an organism").

  
crúor
  9

It's an old name for hemoglobin ("protein that carries oxygen in the blood"). As it gives it its red color, poetically it is still used as a synonym for blood, and in its Latin origin cruor, oris means "spilled blood".

  
angunia
  6

This word already only appears in historical dictionaries of the RAE, and means "anguish, anxiety", probably from the Latin agonio, as, are ("to agonize"), taken from the Greek 945; 947; 969; 957; 953; 945; ( agony "competition, fight" ) .

  






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