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Spanish Open dictionary by Felipe Lorenzo del Río



Felipe Lorenzo del Río
  3875

 ValuePosition
Position99
Accepted meanings38759
Obtained votes509
Votes by meaning0.0120
Inquiries1180928
Queries by meaning3020
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"Statistics updated on 5/3/2024 6:54:56 PM"




Meanings sorted by:

saray
  27

Saray is the Hebrew name of the wife of the Patriarch Abraham, which they considered sterile because the marriage was childless. Why Saray encouraged her husband to have children with his slave and concubine Agar, with whom he had Ishmael. Later the marriage was visited by unknown assailants who announced it would be parents, what Saray laughed because he was 90 years old. When Saray had Isaac, Yahweh changed its name by Sara which seems that Princess and mother of many generations ( meansGenesis 21 41 cap;

  
firiese
  24

Castilian is old that has not yet replaced the " (f) " initial by the " (h) ". Unusual and equivalent to " hiriese " It's the 3rd person singular preterite imperfect subjunctive of the verb to hurt Latin ferio feris ferire meaning hurt, hit and also to utter. In 1354 Pedro I the cruel, King of Castiella, Toledo, Leon, Gallizia...directs a letter trying to the case that Christians and Jews have to advance from the city of Murcia: " quando algunt christiano firiese to algunt Jew who pechase seys mill maravedis and sy algunt Jew firiese to christiano... "

  
poner por las nubes
  23

Put someone in the clouds, as you said Margarito Cázares entry, means to praise him too much, justifiably or not. If add you the thoughtful " is " ( via clouds ) then we can talk about things meaning " encarecer " ( Christmas sea bream was soaring ) or we can talk about people, then having two meanings: get angry or praise.

  
alioska
  24

It is the Russian diminutive of Alejandro, a phonetically nice name.

  
ingurumena
  38

It is a word of the Basque language which means the environment: nature, living beings and their relationships

  
subflubial
  31

subflubial is incorrectly written, and should be written as "Sub" being its meaning:
Word of Latin Etymology: sub: below and fluvius fluvii: River, running water; Therefore, as Stephen said, and since it is adjective means what is under River

  
que es pedantismo
  28

It means pedantry, attitude of which boasts of his knowledge or wisdom regardless of having them or not. Comes from the Greek country Paidós: child and the suffix - ISM used to form nouns of action, or abstract meaning in general theories, doctrines, attitudes or conditions personal.

  
trancadera
  14

For the SAR is synonymous with bottling or circulatory blockage; in the astur-leones language means lock and close is said to also lock, Word of Celtic origin ( deadlock: 41 iron bar;

  
persona que estudia el universo
  19

Before the emergence of scientific method and consequently of modern science, prompted, among others, by Galileo Galilei ( 17TH century ) to those who studied the universe ( cosmos 41 Greek; they were called cosmologists and cosmology to the part of philosophy studying it. Current science try to know everything, but each one has a specific object and an own standpoint. Now, the science that studies the cosmos or macrouniverso with a global point of view is astronomy and therefore those who study the universe will be astronomers, helped other science especially physics. One of the most important fisico-astronomos of today is English Stephen Hawking who, being ridden in a wheelchair ( because you have many years 41 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; It does not stop being a brilliant scientist, not to say the brightest.

  
istrion
  27

istrion is incorrectly written, and should be written as "actor" being its meaning:
Greco-Latin comedies and tragedies was the actor who acted disguised. In Rome the actors used to be slaves and socially considered infamous is impeding them gain Roman citizenship. This socially negative connotation has reached our days, as he has been considered them people ill live. The word histrion ( histrionis in latin histrio: actor, comedian )?? over time it became to designate all theatrical actors. He is currently considered histrionic anyone who acts with excessive involvement in their daily lives.

  
pertenenciente relativo a los sueños
  9

The belonging or pertaining to dreams is called dream ( from Greek oneiros oneirou: dream ). This cultismo was introduced in the first half of the 20th century, period in which he was booming the psychoanalysis of Freud which was based, inter alia, on the interpretation of dreams.

  
gorri¿n
  14

The Sparrow common, present in all the peoples of Spain ( passer domesticus ) in the language of ready to the Northwest of the province of Zamora, language included in the astur-leones, he is called pardal

  
eclectico
  31

eclectic is incorrectly written, and should be written as "eclectic" being its meaning:
Singular masculine adjective of eclecticism that is a little original mix of ideas from different related doctrines on a particular issue. Its etymology is Greek ( ek: of, from outside and lektos: lego participle: say, pick ). "What was said or picked out "

  
zutano
  52

The complete enumeration in Spanish of a series of people unspecified or imaginary that we do not know the name or do not want to say is this: fulano, mengano, zutano, perengano. Very often used only the first or the first two

  
falcemia
  92

It is a hereditary disease, also called sickle cell anemia that affects red blood cells that have an abnormal hemoglobin that hardens them and distorts what can not do well its function.

  
cirzo
  19

cirzo is incorrectly written, and should be written as "cierzo" being its meaning:
You may want to say " cierzo " that it is a strong, fresh and dry that originated in the Valley of the Ebro, preferably in winter, NO direction and wind caused by the pressure difference between the Mediterranean and the Cantabrian zone. He was talking about in the II century a. d. C. the Roman writer Cato the censor in their Chronicles of Hispania Citerior calling it " unusua " others called him " circius " and they said that it could shoot down an armed man

  
hipiatra
  44

Word of Greek origin ( hippos hippou: horse and iatros iatrou: doctor ): veterinarian of horses.

  
calendario
  50

I want to make a correction to my previous post: our mystique of the 16th century, in the calendar of Saints of the Catholic Church, is Santa Teresa de Jesús or Teresa of Ävila and not St Teresa of the child Jesus or Teresa of Lisieux, also French and chronologically later barefoot Carmelite. Our Teresa de Jesús, mystical and fighter, effectively died October 4, 1582 in Alba de Tormes. According to the description made it his confessor Francisco Ribera was " beautiful in her youth, and even then... " and had three small moles on the left side of the face.

  
modejas
  15

It is a Spanish surname, probably a deformation of mudejar, derived from mudayyan, Arabic word meaning domestic or domesticated. The Mudejar were Muslims who remained in Christian lands are allowed to continue with their religion, their language and customs. They were lowly, peasants related to irrigation or specialized craftsmen. Over time the conditions of tolerance were disappearing and the fear of the Inquisition made them change to the name.

  
baumanometro aneroide
  103

aneroid baumanometro is incorrectly written and should be written as "aneroid baumanometro" being its meaning:
Word's Greek etymology, created by the French inventor Pierre Varignon of century XVII-XVIII ( hands: light, not very dense; Metron metrou: measure; an: no, no; AER aeros: air and eideos eidos: shape, appearance, idea ) that would mean not very dense, vacuum measurement. It is the unit for measuring blood pressure created in 1915 by William A. Baum. The prefix bau - does honor to its name.

  






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