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Spanish Open dictionary by Pedro Huertas



Pedro Huertas
  8

 ValuePosition
Position167167
Accepted meanings8167
Obtained votes03668
Votes by meaning04336
Inquiries421186
Queries by meaning534336
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"Statistics updated on 5/1/2024 3:55:14 PM"




Meanings sorted by:

follower
  64

Follower is but an Anglicism introduced by the ultra-late use of social networks and by the intellectual laziness of not using our language correctly. Follower is an English word that has exactly the same meaning as a follower in Spanish that, according to the SAR, is an adjective that applies to the one who follows something or someone. Apply people and can be used as a noun. If you find that it sounds very crude, in Spanish we have a more fashionable synonym that perfectly replaces follower; it is the word FAN accepted by the Royal Academy and derived from the English fanatic. So, instead of saying I'm a follower of your youtube channel; you can say I'm a fan or a follower of your youtube channel.

  
rastacuerismo
  48

According to the Royal Academy the word rastacuero is a qualifier that serves to refer to a wealthy and boastful inculct person. It is interesting to see that the royal academy gives this word a French origin and says that it is derived from rastaquouére which in French defines a striking-looking foreigner, showing a suspicious wealth. The Larousse dictionary says that the adjective rastaquou're derives from Spanish drags leathers that initially designate tanners or wholesalers of furs and hides from South America. With the presence in Paris of many South Americans flaunting the wealth accumulated in this activity in the nineteenth century, the term acquires its pejorative meaning in French. It is then reused in this regard in Latin America. Then, in short, the rastacuerism, is but a noun that serves to designate people with a scraper attitude, that is, a person who flaunts what is not, or who shows in a clumsy way and pregnant a social position that is not his.

  
antepiano
  36

I end up used in theater to name the last rehearsal where the stage manager can make retouching or modifications, without orchestra and is usually the first rehearsal with costume, see this page https : //en . Wikipedia. org/wiki/Regidor_de_espectáculo_en_vivo

  
chácara
  47

According to the dictionary of the Royal Academy ( https : //dle . rae . es/chácara ) you can try two possibilities : the first would be the word chácara with tilde and no chacara, which is a female name used in Bolivia, Ecuador, El Salvador , Honduras , Nicaragua , Peru , Dominican Republic and Uruguay; to define a CHACRA or a plot of cultivated land or a farm. The second possibility is the same word (chácara), which, according to the same dictionary of the SAR, would be a male name used in Venezuela and Colombia to define a purse or a bag to carry cash. In Panama, however, that word (chácara) is used to name a bag woven with plant fibers, made of indigenous manufacturing, now extended to other rural areas. We will have to see if the people who searched for that word omitted the tilde in the search.

  
maxivestido
  44

According to the Royal Academy of the Language, maxi- (from Latin. max?mus ) means very large or very long and is used in compound words such as maxi skirt or maxi dress. In the 1980s, with disco fashion, long dresses or long skirts were used that in the middle of fashion were simply called maxis in the way of minis of the 60s and 70s. In short, Maxi dressed, is a term also used to denomimate very long and elegant dresses used in galas, marriages and important events.

  
chaleco-amarillología
  48

It is a neologism, coined by the French sociologist Julien Damon, to refer to the long debate he held, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, with 64 intellectuals in the Elysus to seek solutions to the great problems facing France during the yellow vest protests. Neologism arises when in a statement the French president states that they are exercising vest-yellowology in the Elyseo. As saying that the debate and analysis of the situation had reached the levels of a scientific debate.

  
polyestireno
  65

Polystyrene and not "polystyrene" since in Spanish the and after a consonant is not used. Polystyrene is a type of plastic or thermoplastic polymer that is obtained from the polymerization of the monomer styrene. This plastic is used according to its form (expanded or crystallized) in the manufacture of yogourt containers, CD boxes, fish boxes, ice boxes, food containers, protective shells for the transport of electrical appliances and in the construction industry, among others. It is called differently according to the countries. Some synonyms, words or similar expressions may be Argentine : telgopor , Bolivia : plastofor , colombia : icopor , rich coast : white cardboard , stereo, vat : polyfouma , ecuador : plum, foamf or foamflex , the savior : durapax

  
berriondo
  69

It seems misspelled because it's not really standard Spanish. In that case, that qualifier would be written by pouring. A word that comes from Latin verres, verraco, and -ibundus . Always sexually aroused or, in other words, is said of herbs or similar things when they are withered, or poorly cooked and hard. However, in the colloquial Spanish of Colombia, the word berriondo or verriondo serves to refer, in the case of a person, to someone who is a beautiful person, strong, determined, powerful, fierce, courageous. But you can also refer to a muergan, a, a cheater, a rogue, or a mañoso. That qualifier also applies to things or situations. For example : This is or is berriondo . It would equate to : this is either this complicated or difficult. From where you derive berriondera, which in Colombian is equivalent to difficulty.

  






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