S Logo
 Dictionary
 Open and Collaborative
 Home page

Spanish Open dictionary by Felipe Lorenzo del Río



Felipe Lorenzo del Río
  3887

 ValuePosition
Position99
Accepted meanings38879
Obtained votes1329
Votes by meaning0.0320
Inquiries1251768
Queries by meaning3220
Feed + Pdf Follow the Felipe Lorenzo del Río dictionary updates through this feed using any of the existing free feed readersFollow the Felipe Lorenzo del Río dictionary updates through this pdf using any of the existing free pdf readers

"Statistics updated on 6/30/2024 2:57:29 PM"




Meanings sorted by:

blacklladolid
  29

Literary contest of black novel that has been held this year 21 in the castle of Fuensaldaña in Valladolid during these days of the summer of San Miguel, sponsored by the winery Cuatro Rayas. The binomial of literature and crime will be joined next year by the delicious wine of our Land of Flavor.

  
leonesidad
  35

The suffix -idad serves us to create abstract nouns such as clarity or generosity. And although we will not find this term in dictionaries we could consider it as the abstract quality of being Leonese, now that some are determined to create Leonese autonomy.

  
taquicárdica
  39

Feminine of tachycardic, adjective of tachycardia, medical term of Greek origin: From tachys, fast, fast and kardia, heart. If the pulsations of our heart accelerate for no apparent reason it is a warning that something is not going. If the heart accelerates after an effort, then it is normal.

  
cantore al liuto
  32

In Italian, lute singer, luttist singer, Italian renaissance musician continuing the medieval minstrels and troubadours, ancestral memory of Orpheus and his lyre. He sang always accompanied by a stringed instrument such as the lut.

  
mefistófeles
  41

Also Mephisto, literary name of Lucifer, immortalized in Goethe's Faust, typical of German mythology. Its probable etymology is this: Me, negative particle, phos photos, light and philos, friend, the one who loves. The opposite of Lucifer, the light bearer.

  
psicoafectivo
  42

In my opinion it is a redundant term of affective, because everything affective or related to affections, whether feelings, emotions or passions, alguedonic states of our sensitivity, lies in the psyche, although it can also have a somatic expression that we sometimes disguise

  
parleru
  45

Northwestern pronunciation of parlero, which speaks or parla much and often without substance. In the Asturian of my land it was common to close the pronunciation of the o in u in the end of the word. This phonetics occurs especially in the elderly. The new generations have a more Castilian phonetics.

  
ekaterina
  43

Proper name of woman characteristic of Slavic languages such as Russian whose sonority is very pleasant. In German Katharina, in French Katherine and in our language Catalina that probably comes from the Greek kátharos, pure, clean, from which also derives the name of the Cathars or Albigensians.

  
atochamiento
  35

Action and result of cluttering or obstructing with atocha or esparto or other material the passage of something through a duct. Extension means any traffic jam, obstruction, traffic jam, caking and congestion of vehicles or persons.

  
autoideologización
  33

This term that does not appear in any dictionary is difficult for me to understand, because all ideologization or formation of ideology is carried out in relation to others, in contact with the community or society in which we live. Ideology both in its theoretical aspect carried out from the psychological conscience and in its practical aspect from the moral conscience is formed in contact with our fellowmen. Outside of this we will not know how to think or do anything. Another thing is that we learn to criticize the dominant ideology.

  
orgumio
  85

Glíglico term of Julio Cortázar in Rayuela . We already know that this language created by our universal Argentine writer has a semantically open literary and sexual character with Spanish syntax. Phonetics frequently comes close as well, from which we might deduce that orgasm means.

  
covid persistente
  29

In just over 10% of people who have passed this disease it seems that various psychosomatic symptoms such as tiredness, respiratory distress, nausea, diarrhea, abulia are chronic. . . . Well, some researchers at the University of Arkansas believe they have discovered the culprit: A rebellious antibody that attacks ACE2, an angiotensin-converting enzyme that activates the immune system.

  
romperse la crisma
  71

Colloquial verbal locution. Pronominal way of breaking the chrism with the reflective enclitic. Accidentally discalcing, injuring, or hitting oneself the head or other parts of the body. The chrism has come to mean the head because in it the chrism (chrisma in Greek, oil, ointment) was applied in some religious ceremonies.

  
ilienses
  56

Plural of Illian, Trojan, Trojan, relative to Troy, the ancient Ilion or Ilios in Hittite, the city of Ilion whose war Homer sang in the Iliad and Odyssey around the eighth century BC. C . Ilion was located next to the Dardanelles Strait in present-day Turkey.

  
difisismo
  37

From the Greek dys, two and physis, nature. Doctrine defended by Nestorius, patriarch of Constantinople in the fifth century. Nestorianism defended that in Christ there were two natures and two persons, the divine and the human. At the Council of Ephesus the position of Cyril of Alexandria was imposed: two natures but one person. Nestorianism was considered a heresy.

  
cedo alteram
  38

Latinism: give me another . This is what the Roman legionaries of the Rhine called a centurion who beat his undisciplined subordinates in the back with cruelty with a rod. When he broke it he immediately said: cedo alteram . Tacitus tells us in his Annales that his soldiers killed him in the Revolt of the Rhine Legions of the year 14.

  
políptico
  38

In the line of the comrade furoya, it is a term of the field of art of Greek origin. From poly, much, in abundance and ptyx ptychós, fold. These are tables divided into more than three tables or folding panels. Those of two are called diptychs and those of three triptychs. The most emblematic is the ghent polyptych of the fifteenth century, beautiful painting by the brothers Hubert and Jan van Eyck.

  
ser de armas tomar
  65

Verbal locution . Be brave, determined, fearless and even risky in acts and attitudes not being intimidated by the problems and difficulties in the companies or intended objectives. The proper and ancient sense of weapons taking or taking up weapons was the resort to physical violence.

  
monotremado
  36

Also monotreme, from the Greek monkeys, single and trema trematos, hole, hole: which has a single hole. Taxonomic order (monotremata) of some ancient special mammals in the evolutionary line that like birds, reptiles and most fish have a single cloaca, lay eggs and have mammary glands.

  
meterla doblada
  89

Popular expression to mean deceiving, doing a job to someone without them knowing by providing their trust. Contrary to what many think the expression seems to have a military origin referring to the folded blanket to make them look like two. Others refer it to sword fighting in fencing.

  






Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Facebook  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Twitter  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Google+  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on feed