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Spanish Open dictionary by Rolando Escudero Vidal



Rolando Escudero Vidal
  622

 ValuePosition
Position1616
Accepted meanings62216
Obtained votes197
Votes by meaning05322
Inquiries1649017
Queries by meaning275322
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"Statistics updated on 4/24/2024 9:31:28 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

paracas
  23

According to some articles I have read, the Paracas name means " 34 stones rain; because, they say, that " " in quechua means rain and " 34 aco; means " sand 34, " 34 stone; To this should be added the following: it is possible that the term " 34 aco; derives from the quechua Word " agh-gho " very guttural sound, but the term " " has nothing to do with rain, therefore in quechua " 34 rain; reportedly, " tam - now "Rather, the Paracas name matches a native custom of the Los that consists in the sguiente: for him the names depend on the circumstance in which meet or see something. You could say distinguishes the things as common and uncommon. If things are common, there are throughout your environment and you see it every day, they have a name applicable on any site. For example 34-stone ". In quechua " 34 stone; reportedly, " rum - my " and anywhere you see is " rum - my " But when comes to things that are in place but little or only in certain sites, or are personal and are not common, things change.If you see something in your site elsewhere where not had llegaado before does not put the name with which it is known in its habitat but says " it looks like " or " has become " And this is it, possibly happened in Paracas. Immigrants from the region of Chavín de Huantar have seen similar things to what you knew in their place of origin in this area and have said " it has become " what in quechua is achieved by adding the term to name " cash-gha " And in the region of Chavín de Huantar there are places where there are deposits of gypsum whose quechua name is "Pair-ra-ra " and if you want to say that " has become stone plaster " It will be "Pair-ra-ra-cash-gha " What repeated many times over time it can become in Paracas, place where there is much sediment of plaster. And more if this is combined with the fact that in Paracas there are many cliffs that seem gigantic and 34 walls; wall " quechua says " per-gha " and " has become wall " reportedly, " 34 per-gha-cash-gha;

  
pucara
  54

Pucara is a word which possibly derives from the adjective la'kech-hua puc-ca which means red, and when that language is to say " " 34 red is shown appears red " or " is red " reportedly, " 34 puc-ca-ran; and if you want to say " I am red " or " I am red " reportedly, " 34 puc-ca-ra; So the repetition of these words may have originated the name Pucara, honoring the fact that some parts of this area are distinguished from red.

  






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