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Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15545

 ValuePosition
Position22
Accepted meanings155452
Obtained votes3362
Votes by meaning0.027
Inquiries4688793
Queries by meaning307
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"Statistics updated on 6/26/2024 9:38:22 PM"




Meanings sorted by:

conatenación
  44

Surely an error by concatenation.

  
cáspica
  30

It must be a bug by case.

  
zaraza
  44

1st_ Female Shaking . 2o_ Type of fabric printed in cotton . Bramble variant ( "silk cloth listed" ) . See also the saraza, sarasa paronimos.

  
capacidades
  40

Plural of capacity .

  
purépechas
  42

Plural of purépecha . See also tarasco .

  
anguladas
  36

Female plural of angle. See also angled .

  
parrandas
  41

Plural of parranda .

  
ciclovías
  41

Plural of cyclovia . View bikesenda .

  
epidemias
  21

Plural epidemic.

  
ecocidios
  30

Plural of ecocide .

  
pantones
  28

Plural of Pantone® (color card).

  
singulares
  34

Plural singular (for any interpretation of "unique in its kind") .

  
sojización
  24

It's an agricultural term that sneaked into the economy. It comes from soy or soy, and is to favor its cultivation to the detriment of other vegetables that may be less profitable. This usually ends in a monoculture that in the medium or long term is detrimental to a region, but in the short term it brings an economic benefit from high demand. Hence we talk about "soxing the economy" when countries become almost exclusive exporters of soybeans to sustain their income.

  
motu proprio
  52

It is a Latin formula for "voluntarily, on his own initiative." Motu is by "inclination to, movement towards" and proprio by "particular, distinctive".

  
annus mirabilis
  44

Latin phrase that can be translated as "the wonderful year" or "the year of the miracle". It does not apply to a particular date, but to any year where a series of venturous events occur. A curious case is that of 1667 in England, which was a miraculous year for having survived 1666, fateful year because it contained the apocalyptic number 666, and that by numerological superstition was the end of the world since it contained in it all Roman numerical values in decreasing order : MDCLXVI 128530;; and also by the deaths of more than one hundred thousand people in London due to an outbreak of bubonic plague, coupled with a fire that swept through the city leaving some 70000 people homeless. But the following year he began the recovery and earned his qualifier.

  
annus terribilis
  62

It is said in Europe of the year 1348, in that it was decimated by the black death ("bubonic plague") after the pandemic arrived in France from Italy. In Latin it means "terrible year".

  
annus horribilis
  64

It is in Latin, but as a locution it is contemporary. It means "the horrible year" (by tragic, pitiful), and is inspired by the previous annus terribilis, annus mirabilis.

  
rebus sic stantibus
  48

Latin expression used in civil and international law, "Rebus sic stantibus" ( "where things are like this") is used explicitly or implicitly in a contract to be considered valid until the circumstances existing at the time of its conclusion are changed, and that one of the parties is unable to comply for reasons beyond its control. See "pacta sunt servanda" .

  
pacta sunt servanda
  51

The Latin expression "Pacta sunt servanda" ("pacts must be fulfilled") is used in law to enforce an agreement even if there is no contract, as it creates civil obligations. A typical case is the consumer complaint to the non-conformity of a purchased product. It is also used in international law, for an understanding between nations that must be respected. See «rebus sic stantibus»

  
dinamográfico
  33

Relative to dynamography.

  






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