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Spanish Open dictionary by John Rene Plaut



John Rene Plaut
  11532

 ValuePosition
Position44
Accepted meanings115324
Obtained votes1517
Votes by meaning0.0113935
Inquiries4535942
Queries by meaning3913935
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"Statistics updated on 7/4/2024 4:22:34 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

cristopher
  30

Christopher Saxon or English name derived from CHRISTÓPHOROS, bearer of Christ, or the bearer of Christ.

  
budoño
  27

BUDOÑO and more correctly budoños, with s final, although singular It is the common name of two plants: Caucalis platycarpos/C] and Conium maculatum/C] . Annual thorny green plant, 10 to 40 cm tall, with rambling stems. Bi- or tri-pinnatisecta leaves, with narrow segments of sharp ends.

  
enigmatidmo
  25

ENIGMATIDMO error by ENIGMATISM, quality of enigmatic, which maintains a degree of secrecy or doubt about its being or knowledge

  
fundazo
  29

FUNDAZO 1 Augmentative of FUNDO, field, hacienda, agricultural or livestock land of great extension. For the same reason, the augmentative would refer rather to the quality or value of it, rather than to its size. 2 . Blow given with a cover

  
quichalero
  23

QUICHALERO Made poop, which has been shit

  
mesetear
  42

MESETEAR 1 . Surgical procedure of pairing or flattening a bone. 2 . In statistics make a variable take on an approximately constant value over time, graphically simulating a plateau when t is the abcisa.

  
telefonizar
  26

TELEFONIZAR Convert a face-to-face or even digital service, in a robotized or personalized remote version, through a call center, or CALL CENTER

  
mondao
  52

MONDAO in Colombia and Mexico: vulgarism by MONDADO, being peeled, that is, without one, without money, poor. In Mexico, a person who treats his wife or family poorly.

  
ancestria
  7

ANCESTRY spelling error by ANCESTRY, study of ancestors

  
ancestria
  31

ANCESTRY spelling error by ANCESTRY, study of ancestors

  
partido popular
  40

POPULAR PARTY another term already defined and that the dictionary does not register. Given the work it meant to do so, this time I will only say that it is a Spanish center-right political party founded by Fraga in 1989.

  
eduardiano
  39

EDUARDIANO I re-enter this word, I hope that this time it will be definitive. Frustrating. Relating to the period of reign of Edward VII, who ruled England on the death of his mother, Queen Victoria, from 1801 to 1910. Often the period extends until 1912, when the Titanic sank, or until 1914, when the first war began, or at the end of it, in 1918. The reason for this is that at that time the process of ending the tremendous differences in wealth and power of a privileged elite begins. He was succeeded by George V

  
multicampena
  29

MULTICAMPENA spelling error by multicampeona , f . of MULTICAMPEÓN

  
megapíxel
  42

MEGAPIXEL View MEGAPIXEL

  
poner peros
  32

PUT BUTS raise objections, place obstacles (to a proposal)

  
etimología de la palabra universo
  47

ETYMOLOGY OF THE WORD UNIVERSE from the Latin universum set of all things, composed of unus= one and of versus, passive participle of the verb verb vertere=to turn . It strictly means one and what rotates, but the deep sense is one and (all) that revolves around, a wonderful way of describing the whole of all things, putting the viewer at the center of all of them. .

  
metaverso
  62

METAVERSE construction from the Latin meta=beyond and from verse, derived from the verb versus , to turn . In other words, it means one and what surrounds it more distantly, that is, an expanded universe, or that gives greater importance to what surrounds us far away. The director of Meta, the new name of the Facebook platform said that it was "a group of digital spaces that includes 3D, immersive, virtual reality, augmented reality, among others, experiences that are interconnected. Then one can move through these spaces as if one were walking." But the term has previously been used for interactive multiplayer video games, such as World of Warcraft. The creator of the word was Stephenson, who in 1991 used it to define the virtual world, which expanded the perception of the self by the real world. But then the concept was taking 4 different directions, those of four different synthetic worlds namely: Virtual games and virtual worlds: Worlds similar to the one narrated in the novel Snow Crash. They are fully immersive virtual environments, in which the user experiences a simultaneous and joint immersion with other users within a virtual world. This contact may consist of participation in a game (such as World of Warcraft or Tibia), or it may refer to the social aspect (Second Life, for example). Mirror Worlds: Detailed virtual representations of some element of the real world (e.g., . Google Earth, where you can travel the world visualizing each geographical place as if you were really traveling through the places you see) Augmented reality: Applied mirror world technology, which solve problems of daily living. It expands the perceptible physical world, creating an expanded universe of useful information. Lifelogging: anglicism that means log or recording of life, in the sense of carrying or accumulating the history of events. In English, the term comes from log, trunk, and the verb responds to the accumulation of logs by lumberjacks. Then computer science and other areas incorporated it to name a set of to-dos (backlog). As these verbs do not exist in Spanish (registration would be ambiguous) the original word is adapted. Systems that collect information about everyday life, big data, which they then process in statistical form.

  
trípodo
  27

TRIPOD Tripod, which has three legs

  
aligarto
  57

ALIGARTO Spanglish derived from the English alligator, alligator

  
chavín
  37

CHAVÍN indigenous people and culture that inhabited present-day Peru between 1200 and 400 BC. C . approximately. It has been certified as a Cultural Heritage of Humanity for having been a ceremonial and cultural radiation center in what is present-day Peru. Advances in agricultural technology, metallurgy and textiles stand out.

  






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