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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
Inquiries1251948
Queries by meaning3220
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"Statistics updated on 7/1/2024 3:08:04 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

gravitación universal
  12

It's one of the forces of the universe. The others are electromagnetism and nuclear. Its mathematical formulation was expressed by Newton in his Principia Mathematica in the late seventeenth century. The gravitational interaction between two celestial bodies, such as the moon and earth, means that they attract each other in a relationship directly proportional to their mass and inversely proportional to their distance. Newton was inspired by previous authors, especially in Kepler's third law enunciated in the first third of the same century.

  
isagoge
  39

From Greek EISAGOG , introduction, import, initiation, EIS, inside, inward and AGO, drive, drive : enter, carry inside. Book written by the neoplatonic philosopher Porfirio, disciple of Plotino, of the neoplatonic school of Rome in the 3rd century, on Aristotelian categories. This Introduction to Aristotelian Categories was used as a text of Aristotelian logic in European universities throughout the Middle Ages.

  
contingente-necesario
  16

They serve these philosophical concepts of homage to our horniest film director, José Luis Cuerda, who died a few days ago. Because, Mr. Mayor, we are all contingents but you are necessary ( Amanece, which is not little). In the Scholastic Philosophy of Aristotelian-Tomist a", the contingent is and may not be, for it is not by itself but by another. Its anonymity what is necessary is what it is but it cannot be because it is by itself. In these concepts one of the ways is based, the third, of St. Thomas Aquinas to "demonstrate" the existence of God.

  
la tetera de russell
  22

Or the agnosticism of the philosopher. It is an argumentative analogy about the existence of God. In 1952 Bertrand Russell wrote Is there a God? Here he proposed the existence of a very small porcelain teapot orbiting between Earth and Mars. Mr Russell, you'd have to prove it to us. No, no, you guys show your unreality. This is the case in our culture with the existence of God. He also wrote "Why am I not a Christian?" placing in religions the source of most of our historical fanaticism and violence.

  
rv
  16

RV : Ryom Verzeichnis , Ryom Catalogue . Repertory of the works of Antonio Vivaldi made in 1973 by the Danish musicologist Peter Ryom. This documentation was not done according to the chronology.

  
menisco
  18

From Greek meniskos, diminutive of menes, lunite, small moon. It is a cartilage with this shape or the disc, present in our joints, as in the knee, which gives stability and cushions the bone shocks of the joint.

  
bertrand russell
  13

Yesterday we remembered a Master of Logic and Peace. From a false statement you can deduce anything. Someone provoked him: If two plus two is five, do you follow that I am the pope? The Master argued: If two and two are five, then four is equal to five. If we subtract three on both sides of the equation, one is equal to two. The pope and I are two. As two is equal to one, then I am the pope.

  
setenil de las bodegas
  11

Charming village of the province of Cadiz, urbanized in descending sections from the castle to the Gadalporcún River, a tributary of Guadalete, which has eroded the rock in which some street is embedded. Besieged seven times unsuccessfully in the reconquest ( septem nihil ) until the definitive in 1484. It was declared a Historic Artistic Ensemble in 1985.

  
beñesmer
  14

Also beñesmen, beñasmer, benismer, benismen or begnesmet. Names of the month of August and the celebrations of the harvest on which the Tinerfeños celebrated the feast of the Candelaria in August and February. According to others, this Christian festival has its origins in the processions of the Roman Lupercales. In these cultural overlays Christians were always teachers. They didn't suppress the pagan party, but they transformed it.

  
fobomelo
  19

It could be accepted as Hellenism, an anonymity of phyllomelo, but it is not a word RAE. PHOBOS, fear, dislike and MELOS, singing, melody : the one who hates music. Poor whoever has this misfortune! Even Nietzsche, one of the masters of suspicion, argued that life without music would be a mistake.

  
pentimento
  11

Italianism. Repentance. Alteration or correction in a painting, drawing or other work of art on the original idea of the author, which was covered up but with the passage of time or with the current restoration techniques or inspection methods, such as x-rays or infrared reflectography , are exposed. On the Christ of Velázquez, I heard that the face did not fit his satisfaction and that, angry, the Sevillian had thrown the brush on the canvas. That's why Christ's long hair covers half the face. I do not know if this will be one of the grooming pentimenti, but in some other cases they are observable.

  
ajolote
  17

As our dictionary tells us the word comes from Nahuatl axolotl, water animal. It is a salamander-like amphibian, endemic to Mexico and critically endangered. Scientists call it Ambystoma mexicanum and have begun to study it carefully for its regenerative capacity. Not only is it able to regenerate your tail like our lizards, you also regenerate your legs, eyes, heart, lungs and even the brain. Studying his genome could give clues in regenerative medicine. Scientists at Yale University are on it.

  
izas, rabizas y colipoterras
  27

It is the title of a book from the 60s with social photography of the Chinatown of Barcelona by Joan Colom and text by Camilo José Cela, who took the expression of an anonymous sonnet of the Songbook General of Antwerp of 1557, which reads as follows: "Of many coimas I had toledanas , / from Valencia , Seville and other lands / izas, rabizas and colipoterras , / hurgamys and putaraanas / of many naps, nights and mornings / I came to look for closings . . . "That's what they called the women of life in 16th-century Germania.

  
agrofa
  17

In the jargon of the Germanía of the XVI, woman of life, meretriz, buscona, coima, courtesan, prostitute, maintained, pelandusca, projima, whore, carcavera. . .

  
gente de la carda
  36

Unrecommended people living, bad living people, ruffians and criminals. They were already called this in the sixteenth century as revealed by the writer María Inés Chamorro Fernández in her Dictionary of Villains , subtitled Dictionary of Germania : Jacarandina Language, Ruits, Mandiles, Roosters, Viltonas, Zurrapas , Carcaveras , Mucaveras trees, floratrees and other people of the card. María Inés has also written about the gastronomy of Quixote.

  
botifler
  22

Also butifler, castilian botiflero or butiflero . That's what the Catalans called the 18th-century Succession War the supporters of Philip V, perhaps by beauté fleur (beautiful flower) in reference to the flower of lis of the bourbons. Now the independenceists call not only the supporters of the monarchy but anyone who does not identify with the ideals of independenceists, who they regard as a traitor to the homeland. The term has always had and has derogatory connotation.

  
palabras graves
  15

Also called plains are all those whose accent falls on the penultimate syllalaba. So are most of the words in our language. Thus, for example, if we observe the words expressed up to this sentence, we have 12 flat words versus 10 acute (of which 7 are monosyllables) and 2 sydrúlous. They wear all the bass words not finished in -n , -s or vocal. Those that end in -s preceded by another consonant are accentuated and also those finished in - and when it acts as a consonant. E.g. biceps and poney.

  
a.d sigla
  9

To. D. are acronymfor Anno Dómini but in capital letters. They mean in the year of the Lord and are equivalent d. C. , after Christ; expression the latter more common. To. D. was put before the date and d. C. postponed. Currently some prefer to avoid the reference to Christianity and talk about the Common Age ( E. C. or e. C. ) or Our Age ( N . E. o n. E. ) . The Royal Academy admits them. The Freemasons said Was Vulgar (E. ?. ) .

  
triaje
  29

From French triage, selection, classification. In military medicine since the time of Napoleon and especially since world war I, classification of the wounded on the battlefield according to the priority of assistance. This selection process is also now done in hospital emergencies especially now that flu viruses are camping at their fingertips.

  
campar a sus anchas
  40

Expression done : act and move without control or constraints. This uncontrolled behavior can be attributed to both animals and humans. You can also say camp for your repetos.

  






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