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Spanish Open dictionary by Felipe Lorenzo del Río



Felipe Lorenzo del Río
  3876

 ValuePosition
Position99
Accepted meanings38769
Obtained votes619
Votes by meaning0.0220
Inquiries1193708
Queries by meaning3120
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"Statistics updated on 5/15/2024 7:58:46 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

intelligenti pauca
  30

Latinism in our language, most commonly used in academic areas, simplification of " intelligenti pauca verba " that perfectly translates the saying " a good listener, few words suffice "

  
retilar
  34

This verb is not recorded in the dictionary, but in the language gliglico Julio Cortázar. Remember that this language, as the Argentinian lunfardo, invented by characters from hopscotch to conceal their amorous Affairs the reader is encrypted, suggestive language, sexual and semantically opened although the syntactical skeleton is Spanish. So in Chapter 20 of Rayuela Horacio asks the magician does with Gregorovius, his alleged rival saying: but you retila Myrtle? I don't go to lie. Te veras retila?

  
nombres neider
  22

Neider, neid words are German and means envious; also neiden, envy; neiderin, neiderinnen, neidisch, envious.

  
eleuterio
  50

Proper name of Greek origin, derived from eleutheros - to - on: characteristic of the free man, who talks and work freely in opposition to the slave. Therefore, Eleuterio means free man

  
zamarra
  47

Alistano bable is also pastor backpack made with sheep untanned skin and wool on the outside to carry food and other belongings. Usually it hung to the shoulder when he moves around the field. Inside you will find bread loaf, cheese, chorizo, a knife, a cask of wine and little fruit.

  
dentrica
  23

dentrica is incorrectly written, and should be written as "dendrites" being its meaning:
They are branches of the neuron around its cell body that would be like the Crown of a tree which has a trunk, the axon, and roots with synaptic vesicles, bags filled with chemical liquids which, at the beginning of the nerve impulse, go abroad to warn the dendrites of the next neuron that reverse power polarity and continue with the nervous electrical impulse through the system. One of the initiators of the study of neurons was our Ramón y Cajal. The nervous system is a very complex world, with it up thought.

  
ripsalidosis
  27

Also called Christmas cactus or flower of January is a cactus plant epiphytic hanging flat stems, blooming in that time, with very beautiful hanging flowers, especially those of color red or pinkish, scientific name Rhipsalidopsis gaertneri, coming from the tropical forests of Brazil with numerous hybrids since 1932.

  
omer
  45

In the language of the old testament, ancient Jewish measure of capacity for solids and liquids, equivalent to just over two litres. According to archaeological investigations was the tenth part of an ephah, and contained ten baths. Some translated homer, jomer, gomer or gomor; others pronounce this word as serious.

  
banca etica
  13

banking ethics is incorrectly written and should be written as "ethical banking" its meaning:
So-called social banking is also a set of financial organizations from different countries that finance only projects collective, not individual, social and ecological interest with real, not speculative economy criteria. An example of ethical banking is the Grameen Bank of Bangadlesh of the 2006 peace nobel Laureate, Muhammad Yunus, launched by solidarity-based financing and local micro-credit, especially for women. I would like to mention other examples in Europe: Fiare, Triodos Bank, Oikos Bank, Folke Sparekassen, Cooperative Bank, culture Bank...

  
rabdomiolisis
  26

Disease characterized by muscle necrosis produced by different causes by releasing the blood cellular substances such as protein Myoglobin or creatine phosphokinase. Cell damage can be caused by lesions crush of earthquake or bombing, physical exhaustion, infections, intoxication by drugs or alkaloids and the usual consequence, renal injury and acute renal failure. In the Bible a description of this syndrome is made during the exodus from Egypt when the Jews ate quail in large quantities in the desert. Greek etymology: rabdos rabdou: baton, knurled shank, mys myos: mouse, muscle and lysis lyseos: action of unleashing, releasing, dissolution: dissolution of the muscle cells.

  
pileo
  60

pileus is incorrectly written, and should be written as "pileus" being its meaning:
Conical hat, symbol of Manumission in ancient Rome, as well noted by Alfredo Edgardo, the pileus is also the upper part of the head of the birds that sometimes has a different plumage and by extension, also said of the hat of the mushrooms.

  
intereses glosicos
  40

interests glossic is incorrectly written and should be written as "interests glossic" being its meaning:
Plural of glosico interest or interest in the language or the language of the Greek glossa or glotta: language. It would be, for example, interest that moves us to us by the open dictionary.

  
retalar
  29

Alistano asturleones localism which means protest, sulking, oppose something speaking aloud but not face to face.

  
iaia
  32

Feminine of iaio, Valencian and Catalan form of yayo, grandfather infant expression quite extended across the peninsula and whose origin linguists located in Levante, Aragon, Navarra, Rioja and surrounding areas.

  
organoclorado
  19

Adjective apply to organic compounds of carbon, hydrogen, and chlorine; some of these compounds are natural and are present in alkaloids, terpenes, amino acids, flavonoids, steroids, and fatty acids; others are artificial to replace hydrogen atoms with chlorine and are used for different purposes such as drugs, solvents and pesticides, although the latter, organochlorine pesticides, are currently prohibited because they are harmful to living things accumulate in them, the food cademas and groundwater.

  
diccionario real academia de la lengua española
  17

Acronym, DRAE: is the collection in book form or in electronic form all the words and expressions of the Spanish language in alphabetical order and briefly defined, recognized and controlled by the Royal Spanish Academy until the 22nd Edition published in 2001, moment in which the DRAE becomes dictionary of the Spanish language which involves 22 academies of the language Spanish existing in the world 20 American, of the Philippines and the Spanish; all constitute the ASALE ( Association of academies of the Spanish language ) founded in Mexico in 1951 with headquarters in Madrid ( Spain ) where they also have headquartered the Royal Spanish Academy and the Instituto Cervantes. The motto of the ASALE is: " a lineage, a language and a destination ". The 23rd edition of October 2014 contains 93.111 entries and 195.439 meanings ( some 19,000 Americanisms ) with some clarifications and lexical-grammatical changes.

  
pedestacion
  66

pedestacion is incorrectly written, and should be written as "pedestacion" as meaning:
Pedestacion is not registered in the dictionary nor its parallel sitting, although standing equivalent to bipedalism, or ability to be and walk on two feet or legs as opposed to quadrupeds; This fact which marks the beginning of the process of hominisation started perhaps makes 2 million years with the australopithecines. Pedestacion would have Latin Etymology, pes, pedis: foot and sto, stare, steti, statum stas: standing, stand up.

  
fitoplasma
  21

Scientific term that designates a parasite of plants discovered by the 1960s, still not very well known in their DNA, halfway between viruses and bacteria, transmitted by insects such as Dutch elm disease and affecting the phloem or Liberian vessels that carry the SAP produced from the leaves towards the non-photosynthetic parts of the plant hindering or annulling its passage and causing yellowing and shriveling leaves. Dutch elm disease, which is a fungus, affects the xylem that leads the wise gross to the leaves. The etymology of phytoplasma is Greek, Python phytou: plasma plasmatos and plant: shape, figure, appearance, the appearance or form acquired the plants when they have the disease.

  
musas
  20

The Muses, in classical Greek mousai, were originally inspiring goddesses of music, later also of letters, arts and love. His genealogy and number were rather confusing to highlighting two versions: they were daughters of Zeus and Mnemosine or Uranus and Gaea. Hesiod was the first to point out the name of the nine finally recognized: Calliope with splints and stylet, Muse of epic poetry, Clio with an open scroll, Muse of history, Euterpe with flute, Muse of music, with the lira Erato, Muse of lyric poetry, Melpomene with buskins, Muse of tragedy, Polimnia white cloak and sceptre Muse of sacred poetry, Talia Theatre mask, Muse of comedy, dancing Terpsichore, Muse of dance and Urania with compass, Muse of astronomy and geometry.

  
trabajadora sexual
  46

It is a noteworthy term for prostitutes and the road open for official recognition and its contribution to social security. Prostitution, although it is not recommended, is morally legitimate, like any human activity, with the condition that it is free and no harm to anyone. I speak of rational morality, not of traditional Christian morality which looks always in sexual something negative.

  






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