Value | Position | |
---|---|---|
Position | 1 | 1 |
Accepted meanings | 35023 | 1 |
Obtained votes | 228 | 1 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 3 |
Inquiries | 1103996 | 1 |
Queries by meaning | 32 | 3 |
Feed + Pdf |
"Statistics updated on 4/29/2024 2:27:02 PM"
It's another name of the pirarucú or paiche. It is a giant fish from the Amazon basin and of rare appearance (prehistoric appearance). It is also called arawana. Fossils dating from the Miocene have been found in Colombia. Name of a genus of species, consisting of 4 species and belonging to the family Arapaimidae. There are 4 species in South America: Arapaima agassizzi , Arapaima gigas , Arapaima leptosoma and Arapaima mapae .
In Colombia we call them crisps and in English it is pop-corn (corn exploded or roasted). The term pochoclo is the form used in Argentina to refer to crisps or popcorn, which was popularized following a bad translation of pop-corn as pop-choclo (being choclo, tender corn, so the translation in that case would be tender corn toteated or sour corn, which is not true. They're the same popcorn, pirate corn or popcorn. In other countries are called millo, corn rositas, pururú, pop, canchita, canguil, pororó, cotufas, chickens, poporopos, chivitas, corn goats, tote corn, pipocas, rosettes, roses, threads, tostones, or cocalecas.
It is a garment that covers both legs separately from the waist. It was initially only used by males, but is currently commonly used by men and women of all ages. Long panties. They can be very long or very short, so they can reach only the groin (mini shorts or shorts), the thigh (pantalonets), the knee ( bermuda), the rings (fishermen or pirates) or up to the ankle (pants). Men's are characterized by a fly. Those worn by women are also called slaks.
Strong stroke made on a piece of paper. I'm tangled. It is the name given to the first synthetic natural fiber. Cellulose Acetate which was also called viscose. Rayón is the name of several municipalities and municipalities of Mexico (States of Chapas, Mexico, Michoacán, San Luis de Potosí and Sonora). It is also a surname of Spanish origin. Last name of a Spanish journalist, historian and writer named Fernando Rayón Valpuesta.