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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15040

 ValuePosition
Position22
Accepted meanings150402
Obtained votes882
Votes by meaning0.017
Inquiries4262133
Queries by meaning287
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Meanings sorted by:

celiaquía
  8

It is a disease also called "gluten-sensitive enteropathy" that is caused by a reaction of the immune system to this protein in the intestines, when wheat, oats, barley or rye are ingested. From Greek 954; 959; 953; 955; 953; 945; ( koilia "belly" ) because of intestinal pains and decomposition. See celiac .

  
astasia
  8

It is the inability to stand, and refers to psychological or psychiatric cases, rather than physical or neurological. From the Greek 945; (a, "without, out") 963; 964; 945; 963; 953; 962; (stasis "state, stability")-953; 945; ( -ia "action, quality") . See Doctor/Astasia. 2nd_ A genus of unicellular algae of the class Euglenoidea. 3º_ Name of a variety of olive tree grown in the province of Castellón (Spain). Astasia is also a woman's name that in this case can be interpreted as "restless". Although the name Anastasia ("resurrected") is used more.

  
escotoma
  13

Blind spot or area of vision due to different causes such as maculopathy, an injury to the optic nerve, a spot on the retina. It comes from the Greek 963; 954; 959; 964; 969; 956; 945; (skotoma "dizziness with obscuration of vision") , by 963; 954; 959; 964; 959; 962; (skotos "darkness, darkness").

  
glosolalia
  8

1st_ The origin of this word is in the Greek version of the New Testament, formed by 947; 955; 969; 963; 963; 945; (glossa "tongue, language") 955; 945; 955; 949; 953; 957; (lalein "to speak") and translates as "to speak in tongues," the "gift of speaking different languages to evangelize other nations." It would be more accurate to say that it is a xenoglossia or xenolalia, but thanks to Pentecostal or charismatic practices 'glossolalia' is considered its synonym. In linguistics, it is the pronunciation of meaningless syllables in a speech for artistic or expressive purposes. When incoherent words are involuntary and outside of religious mysticism, psychiatry and psychology consider it pathological and can respond to various causes.

  
manía
  10

It is an obsessive state of mind, with some fixation or an addiction, which in many cases is taken only as an extravagance. Spanish incorporated it from Latin and this from Greek 956; 945; 957; 953; 945; (mania "violent madness", "obsession"). See suffix -mania .

  
enteropatía
  10

It is said of any disease of the intestines. It has a Greek origin since 949; 957; 964; 949; 961; 959; 957; ( Enteron, "intestine" ) 960; 945; 952; 959; 962; (pathos "experience, suffering").

  
al huevo
  22

In cooking, it is a type of fresh pasta for noodles, which has egg as an ingredient, or its yolk.

  
berlinesa
  11

1º_ Feminine from Berlin ("gentilicio de la ciudad de Berlin, Germany") . 2º_ Invoice or sweet fried bun, spherical in shape and filled with pastry cream, dulce de leche or jam and covered with sugar. The name comes from Berliner Pfannkuchen ("Berlin pan-seared cake") and legend has it that it was created in the 18th century by a Berlin pastry chef who was not able to enter the army as an artilleryman, but was able to enter the army as a baker, and so he created these cakes in the shape of a cannonball.

  
picarón
  15

1st_ Dessert, a typical sweet from Chile and Peru prepared with flour and pumpkin, fried and covered with panela. 2º_ Augmentative of rogue ("naughty, mischievous") .

  
gañote
  9

1st_ Neck . Derogatory of gañón ("cannon, neck"). 2º_ Traditional Easter dessert, it is cooked rolled on a rod which gives it a spout appearance.

  
gazpacho
  7

1º_ It is the name of some typical Spanish foods, a cold Andalusian soup, some Galianos from La Mancha and a rural stew similar to migas. From the mixture of ingredients it seems to have an origin in the Greek word 947; 945; 950; 959; 966; 965; 955; 945; 954; 953; 959; 957; ( gazophylákion ) , an urn in churches where in addition to coins you could even deposit biscuits and loaves of bread as alms.

  
mojama
  9

It is a preparation of tuna meat pressed with salt and dried in the air. It comes from the Arabic 1605; 1615; 1588; 1614; 1605; 1614; 1617; 1593; 8206; (mussamma "waxed, mummified") or its version with article 1575; 1604; 1605; 1588; 1605; 1593; ( almussamma "almojama" ) .

  
cocho
  7

1º_ Variant of cochón ("pig, pig") . 2º_ Inflection of the verb cochar ("to cook"), which today is an archaism. See sponge cake. 3º_ For the previous , is the name of different foods based on cooked flour. See ñaco , ulpo , gofio . 4º_ By the second meaning, it is a colloquial and perhaps derogatory way of calling the calentano ("from the Hot Lands, Mexico"). 5º_ Surely also by some interpretation of the second meaning, it is ", elderly, past age". In some regions, a vulgar way of calling the vulva.

  
oreja de elefante
  7

It is one of the common names of the plant Xanthosoma sagittifolium, because of the shape of its leaves. See chonque, carocaro . 2º_ Name of several culinary dishes.

  
obducción
  5

In geology, obduction occurs when a piece of land is raised by the collision of two continental plates, which generally create a mountain range. See subduction. It's another way of saying "autopsy." In Latin obductio, onis was the action of covering the condemned person with a cloth.

  
subducción
  7

In geology, subduction occurs when a piece of land is submerged by the collision of two continental plates. See obduction .

  
oriente
  9

'East' is a name for the cardinal point East, for the region that lies to the east of a reference point, such as Asia from Europe and its meridian of Greenwich. Also the wind blowing from the eastern region. From the Latin oriens, entis ("nascent, salient, initiating"). See Levante, nascent. 2nd_ By the former, and in a somewhat poetic way, it is childhood, childhood; by the birth of the day, the sun appearing in the East. 3º_ Iridescent glitter of pearls. 4º_ Inflection of the verb orient . See verbs/orient .

  
occidente
  7

It is a way of calling the cardinal point west, also in a general way and written with capital letters it is said of Europe and America as a cultural or economic bloc. The origin is Latin for occidens, entis ("fallen", for the apparent fall of the sun).

  
grande
  4

Larger-than-average size, hierarchy, or duration. It is applied in cases such as corpulent, fat, tall, adult, hero, noble, . . .

  
pequeño
  10

Smaller than average size. It is applied in cases such as low, short, modest, brief, child, unimportant, . . .

  






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