Value | Position | |
---|---|---|
Position | 2 | 2 |
Accepted meanings | 15179 | 2 |
Obtained votes | 88 | 2 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 7 |
Inquiries | 437362 | 3 |
Queries by meaning | 29 | 7 |
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"Statistics updated on 5/8/2024 8:08:56 PM"
It can be assumed that it is a New Testament reference for the book of Matthew, but the syntax used raises doubts because it is not the classic 16: 15 for chapter 16; verse 15. Or maybe you can have an error and omission, and be ?? : 15-16 , which would be the chapter ??; verses 15 through 16.
This was another query to delete, but since they published it. . . See do, an (article), and that last can be an error by mandala, commanded or a trolled by this, as the vulgarization mandaíllo of its diminutive mandadillo, removing the stressed vowel. In fact, they already published that same phrase "make a mandaíllo", which I link because I am not totally sure that it is not a locution.
Let's say that most capuchins (lamps) end with a "tipped" shape, but in this case it turns out that it is a fragment of another expression to say that "it rains copiously" and would be missing (p. eg . ) a "be falling. . . ", which is always followed by something exaggerated and absurd such as "dwarfs, zoretes , cats, . . . " and to reinforce the idea the expression " is added. . . of tip" . Although for this it was common to end with a " . . . of bronze", so there was no doubt as to which cappuccino was being referred to.
1º_ Lazio is a region of Italy that contains its capital Rome and the Vatican City State. The endonym is Lazio, from the Latin Latium which has no clear origin; according to literary tradition it is an eponym of King Latinius, the father-in-law of Aeneas who founded the city in his honor, although there is a mythological origin by latere ("to hide") since the god Saturn, dethroned and without divine attributes, was hidden in that area. But it most likely derives from latus, a, um ("plain, extensive") because its inhabitants (the original Latins) chose a plain at the foot of the mountains to settle. See Latin America . 2º_ Loose, loose, it is said especially of the hair that falls straight and without waves. From Latin flaccidus, a, um ("flaccid, lazy").
1º_ The Canary Islands are a Spanish autonomous community in an archipelago on the Atlantic Ocean. The name is Latin for can, canis ("dog"), since the Romans were struck by the number of dogs (brought by their inhabitants as shepherds and food) they found on the islands. 2º_ Feminine plural of the Canarian bird.