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Spanish Open dictionary by Felipe Lorenzo del Río



Felipe Lorenzo del Río
  3887

 ValuePosition
Position99
Accepted meanings38879
Obtained votes1329
Votes by meaning0.0320
Inquiries1251858
Queries by meaning3220
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"Statistics updated on 6/30/2024 5:25:34 PM"




Meanings sorted by:

plantas c4
  32

They are plants that when fixing CO2 in photosynthesis to create glucose use 4 carbons, reduce leaf photorepiration and water consumption, thus make them more drought resistant and therefore more cost effective. Most of the plants are C3. Many current research is aimed at transforming the C3 pathway of photosynthesis into C4. The process of photosynthesis in plant life uses light, CO2 and water. The thing seems simple but it's not. For me it is one of the mysteries of life.

  
a rolete
  31

Argentine idiom equivalent to in large quantity, much, with profusion, to mansalva, at shovel tip, to hullporro, to porrillo, to blanket, to tutiplén, in abundance.

  
biomarcador
  40

Substance of our organism normally present in the blood, which is indicative of our biological state, as our ability to face infections. They can be genetic or acquired, molecular, such as enzymes or proteins, or cellular. Current researchers have identified 5 biomarkers whose high level have been associated with the severity of coronavirus. These are : IL-6 ( interleucine ), D, CRP, LDH and ferritin dimer. This knowledge can help prevent gravity.

  
airlock
  34

Anglilicism. Air bubble, air trap, air bag, air chamber. Device used in fermentation processes that allows the release of CO2 without oxygen entering. It is usually used by manufacturers of beers and artisan wines after three or four days of starting fermentation which is initially aerobic

  
injerto de corona o de coronilla
  54

The crown or crown graft is the one that is made by inserting between the albura and the bark of the cut base one or more spikes. It is usually made in spring when the base or pattern is very large and woody. When the sap is raised, welding is easily produced. However it is necessary to compress the bark of the base with biodegradable tape and cover the cut with healing paste.

  
boyacense
  62

Gentile and typical of the Colombian Andean region of Boyacá of great cultural and geographical diversity, land of good cyclists, such as Nairo Quintana, with capital in Tunja.

  
sedia stercoraria
  46

In the Vatican museum there is a wooden chair with a large central hole. Also english monarchs used to have a chair like that for someone after. . I'll wipe their ass. But according to legend, this Vatican sedia was to check the masculinity of the pope chosen after the history of the papisa Joan in the middle of the ninth century. Much has been written about this, but nothing official. The Papisa Juana would come to coincide with the period of Benedict III who would die in 858.

  
duos habet et bene pendentes
  35

It's got two and well they hang up. Thus spoke the youngest cardinal of the conclave who chose the new pope by putting his right hand under the stercorary sedia; to which others replied : Deo thank you (less badly). This is what happened, according to legend, after the Papisa Juana in the middle of the ninth century.

  
betacismo
  52

Linguistic phenomenon of some romance languages such as Spanish, Galician, Occitan, Sardinian. . . that does not distinguish the pronunciation from b and v; that's why many speakers of our language when writing commit so many misspellings that they also appear in some ancient Latin inscriptions : Maximianus botum solbit , instead of votum solvit. Maximian fulfilled his vote. By the influence of other languages some speakers give the v a fricative hue that resembles the f.

  
cirriense
  31

Also Cirrio, Gentile of La Cistérniga, formerly Cestérniga and Cestiérniga, town of Vallisoletana, considered until the middle of the nineteenth century a neighborhood of the aspiring city to capital of Castile and León. Documents of the sixteenth and seventeenth century already speak of this town in which he married Don Rodrigo Calderón, Marquis of Sieteiglesias, chamber secretary of Felipe III, with Doña Inés de Vargas, who twice denied at the altar wanting to do so, although the third accepted.

  
interferón
  34

As our Dictionary says is a protein generated by leukocytes to attack infections or tumor cells. Scientists distinguish various types, alpha, beta, gamma, delta. . . Today's French doctors have discovered that their deficiency is one of the causes of the severity of coronavirus. One of its important functions is to regulate the immune system's response to infections. It is also used against multiple sclerosis, septic shock or hepatitis C.

  
aquecedor
  29

Quentator. For our tongue brothers is the heater. Any device that radiates heat.

  
gruit
  35

Old German. Also grut , gruyt or gruitrecht. Herbal blend used in middle age, before the introduction of hops, to aromatize and conserve beer, especially in the north and Central Europe. When the brewing came out of the abbeys the brewers had to buy the mixture from the nobles and municipalities as a tax. The mixture contained artemis, myrtle, millenrama, marrubio, heather, juniper berries, cumin, rosemary, sage, liquorice, and even wormwood and beleño, according to the zones.

  
quintaesencia
  32

The most characteristic and typical of a thing in a situation of concentration. Among medieval astrologers, fifth element of nature, the ether, which was added to the 4 of Empédocles, earth, water, air and fire. For medieval alchemists and botanists and early modernity was the therapeutic extract of medicinal plants that today we consider the active ingredients and essential oils, what Paracelsus, father of toxicology, called poison. Single facit venenum dosage : only the dose makes something poisonous, responded when someone accused him of giving poison to the sick.

  
alma máter
  56

Latinism in which soul is adjective : mother nurture, mother who vivifies. In classical Rome it was said of the goddess Ceres, Cibeles or even Venus. In the Middle Ages and later it has been said of the Italian university of Bologna (alma mater studiorum), the oldest in the West, and by extension of every university. The most common current use of the locution substantializes the soul by pointing to the person who drives or has the full force of a project or activity.

  
matritenses
  32

Plural of matritense . From Madrid or related to Madrid, whether we refer to the city, the province or the autonomous community, as the companions point out. It is a cultism derived from the Latin Matritus and this, according to some, of materitus, a place rich in woods, wood, thus rejecting the Arab origin of Mayrit or Magerit, although on this issue there are many discussions among linguists. The truth is that this cultism is used rather for things and not for people. The vulgar madrid can use it for people or things.

  
butirato
  35

From Greek boutyron, butter, bous, cow and tyros, cheese. Salt or ester of butyric acid that produces the intestinal flora to protect the intestinal mucosa especially in the colon. It's starting to be taken into account by nutritionists. They also call it fruity-smelling butanoate. Butyric acid was discovered in butter in 1814 by French chemist Michel Eugene Chevreul.

  
omnis
  62

Two-terminating Latin adjective, omnis omne, everything. In our language it is usually used as a prefix with that meaning. For example ubiquitous, it is everywhere.

  
mundo today
  30

Satirical newspaper created in Spain in 2009 with news of horn that more than one have been left to checkers not knowing what to think. His news of satirical and humorous content is close to parody and waiting in the line of Argentine Angau. Today I read in the media that Iran has issued an arrest warrant against Donald Trump for the assassination of General Soleimani. World Today! Well, no, it's true and he's asked Interpol for help.

  
farmacognosia
  28

From Greek phármakon, drug, drug, poison and gnosis, knowledge. A term introduced by the German physician Aenotheus Seydler in 1815 that defines it as the branch of pharmacology that studies drugs and medicinal substances of natural origin with beneficial or non-beneficial properties, come from animals, plants, fungi or bacteria.

  






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