-
121 opresión
f.1 oppression.2 oppression, burden, yoke.* * *1 oppression\opresión en el pecho tightness of the chest* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (=sensación) oppression; [de situación, lugar] oppressiveness2) (Med) difficulty in breathing, tightness of the chest* * ** * *= oppression.Ex. This situation serves to perpetuate the social oppression and marginalisation of such women.----* huir de la opresión = escape + the oppression.* * ** * *= oppression.Ex: This situation serves to perpetuate the social oppression and marginalisation of such women.
* huir de la opresión = escape + the oppression.* * *1 (de un pueblo) oppression2 (en el pecho) tightness* * *
opresión sustantivo femenino ( de un pueblo) oppression;
( en el pecho) tightness
opresión sustantivo femenino
1 (sometimiento) oppression
2 (sensación de asfixia) tightness: sentía una fuerte opresión en el pecho, I felt a strong tightening sensation in my chest
' opresión' also found in these entries:
English:
oppression
* * *opresión nf1. [represión] oppression* * *f oppression* * *1) : oppression2)opresión de pecho : tightness in the chest -
122 oprimido
adj.oppressed, downcast, laden.past part.past participle of spanish verb: oprimir.* * *1→ link=oprimir oprimir► adjetivo1 oppressed► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 oppressed person1 the oppressed* * *oprimido, -a1.ADJ oppressed2.SM / F•
los oprimidos — the oppressed* * *IIItenía el corazón oprimido por la pena — (liter) his heart was heavy with sadness (liter)
- da masculino, femenino* * *= oppressed, downtrodden.Ex. The architectural styles of some library buildings make the new user feel oppressed, rather than welcome and at ease.Ex. This revolutionary syndicalist union consistently supported the most downtrodden & oppressed, & encouraged a cult of the unspoiled, heroic brawny proletarian with raw courage & 'natural' virtues.----* oprimidos, los = oppressed, the, downtrodden, the.* * *IIItenía el corazón oprimido por la pena — (liter) his heart was heavy with sadness (liter)
- da masculino, femenino* * *= oppressed, downtrodden.Ex: The architectural styles of some library buildings make the new user feel oppressed, rather than welcome and at ease.
Ex: This revolutionary syndicalist union consistently supported the most downtrodden & oppressed, & encouraged a cult of the unspoiled, heroic brawny proletarian with raw courage & 'natural' virtues.* oprimidos, los = oppressed, the, downtrodden, the.* * *‹pueblo› oppressedmasculine, femininelos oprimidos the oppressed* * *
Del verbo oprimir: ( conjugate oprimir)
oprimido es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
oprimido
oprimir
oprimido
oprimir ( conjugate oprimir) verbo transitivo
oprimir verbo transitivo
1 (un botón) to press: la máquina se apaga cuando oprimes este botón, the machine turns off when you press this button
(zapatos, prenda) to be too tight
2 (someter) to oppress: el régimen militar oprimió a los ciudadanos, the military regime oppressed its citizens
' oprimido' also found in these entries:
English:
downtrodden
* * *oprimido, -a♦ adjoppressed♦ nm,flos oprimidos the oppressed -
123 paisano
m.1 peasant, countryman.2 fellow citizen, fellow countryman.* * *► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 (compatriota - hombre) fellow countryman; (- mujer) fellow countrywoman2 (campesino - hombre) countryman; (- mujer) countrywoman\* * *paisano, -a1.ADJ (=del mismo país) from the same country; (=de la misma región) from the same region; (=del mismo pueblo) from the same town2. SM / F1) (=civil) civilianvestir de paisano — [soldado] to be wearing civilian clothes, be in civvies *; [policía] to be in plain clothes
2) (=del mismo país) compatriot, fellow countryman/countrywomanes paisano mío — he's a fellow countryman (of mine); (=del mismo pueblo) person from the same town; (=de la misma región) person from the same region
3) esp Arg (=campesino) peasant4) Cono Sur (=extranjero) foreigner; Cono Sur (=árabe) Arab; Méx (=español) Spaniard; And, Cono Sur (=chino) Chinaman/Chinese woman* * *IIIsomos paisanos — ( compatriotas) we're fellow countrymen; (de la misma zona, ciudad) we're from the same area/place
- na masculino, femenino1)a) ( compatriota) (m) fellow countryman, compatriot; (f) fellow countrywoman, compatriotb) (de la misma zona, ciudad)es un paisano mío — he's from the same area/place as I am
2) (Indum)ir/vestir de paisano — soldado to be in/to wear civilian clothes o (colloq) civvies; policía to be in/to wear plain clothes; sacerdote to be in/to wear secular dress
3)a) (Chi) ( árabe) Arabb) (Per) mountain-dweller of Indian originc) (RPl) peasant* * *= countryman [countrymen, -pl.].Ex. The finest and most influential of these French italics were the work of Robert Granjon, an artist of the stature of his countryman and near-contemporary Garamont and one of the greatest all-round type designers of any period.----* de paisano = in plain clothes.* ropa de paisano = civilian clothes.* vestido de paisano = civilian clothes, in plain clothes.* vestir de paisano = dress in + plain clothes, wear + plain clothes.* * *IIIsomos paisanos — ( compatriotas) we're fellow countrymen; (de la misma zona, ciudad) we're from the same area/place
- na masculino, femenino1)a) ( compatriota) (m) fellow countryman, compatriot; (f) fellow countrywoman, compatriotb) (de la misma zona, ciudad)es un paisano mío — he's from the same area/place as I am
2) (Indum)ir/vestir de paisano — soldado to be in/to wear civilian clothes o (colloq) civvies; policía to be in/to wear plain clothes; sacerdote to be in/to wear secular dress
3)a) (Chi) ( árabe) Arabb) (Per) mountain-dweller of Indian originc) (RPl) peasant* * *= countryman [countrymen, -pl.].Ex: The finest and most influential of these French italics were the work of Robert Granjon, an artist of the stature of his countryman and near-contemporary Garamont and one of the greatest all-round type designers of any period.
* de paisano = in plain clothes.* ropa de paisano = civilian clothes.* vestido de paisano = civilian clothes, in plain clothes.* vestir de paisano = dress in + plain clothes, wear + plain clothes.* * *from the same country ( o area etc)somos paisanos (compatriotas) we're fellow countrymen, we're from the same country; (de la misma zona, ciudad) we're from the same area/placemasculine, feminineA1 (compatriota) ( masculine) fellow countryman, compatriot; ( feminine) fellow countrywoman, compatriotes una paisana mía she's a compatriot of mine o a fellow countrywoman2(de la misma zona, ciudad): es un paisano mío he's from the same area/place as I amB ( Indum):ir/vestir de paisano «soldado» to be in/to wear civilian clothes o ( colloq) civvies;«policía» to be in/to wear plain clothes; «sacerdote» to be in/to wear secular dressC3 ( RPl) peasant* * *
paisano◊ -na sustantivo masculino, femenino
1
(f) fellow countrywoman, compatriotb) (de la misma zona, ciudad):◊ es un paisano mío he's from the same area/place as I am
2 (Indum):
[ policía] to be in/to wear plain clothes;
[ sacerdote] to be in/to wear secular dress
3a) (Per) mountain-dweller of Indian originb) (RPl) peasant
paisano,-a
I adjetivo
1 of the same country
2 (local, campesino) village
II sustantivo masculino y femenino
1 (compatriota: hombre) countryman, (: mujer) countrywoman
2 (campesino, lugareño) villager
III m (no militar) civil: es policía, pero hoy va de paisano, he's a policeman, but today he is in plain clothes
' paisano' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
paisana
- vestida
- vestido
English:
mufti
- plain
* * *paisano, -a♦ adj[del mismo país] from the same country; [de la misma región] from the same region; [del mismo pueblo] from the same town♦ nm,f1. [del mismo país] compatriot, fellow countryman, f fellow countrywoman;[de la misma región] person from the same region; [del mismo pueblo] person from the same town2. [campesino] country person, peasant♦ nm[civil] civilian; [policía] to be in o wearing plain clothes;traje de paisano [de militar] civilian cothes;[de policía] plain clothes;un policía de paisano a plain-clothes policeman* * *m1 compatriot, (fellow) countryman2:* * *paisano, -na ncompatriota: compatriot, fellow countryman -
124 residir
v.1 to reside.El bien anida en las almas nobles Good dwells in noble souls.2 to lie.* * *1 to reside (en, in), live (en, in)2 figurado to lie (en, in)* * *verb1) to live, reside2) lie* * *VI1) (=vivir) to reside, live2)residir en — (=radicar en) to reside in, lie in; (=consistir en) to consist in
la dificultad reside en que... — the difficulty resides in o lies in the fact that...
* * *verbo intransitivob) encanto/interés ( radicar)* * *= reside, dwell.Ex. Column ten is the CD-ROM disc number on which the MARC record resides.Ex. He will dwell in the church that is built by martyrs fighting for justice, by children starving of hunger, by mothers and fathers walking the streets of misery.----* importancia + residir = the importance of + Nombre + lie.* oportunidad + residir en = opportunity + lie in.* problema + residir = problem + reside, problem + lie, problem + come with.* residir en = lie (in), rest on/upon.* * *verbo intransitivob) encanto/interés ( radicar)* * *= reside, dwell.Ex: Column ten is the CD-ROM disc number on which the MARC record resides.
Ex: He will dwell in the church that is built by martyrs fighting for justice, by children starving of hunger, by mothers and fathers walking the streets of misery.* importancia + residir = the importance of + Nombre + lie.* oportunidad + residir en = opportunity + lie in.* problema + residir = problem + reside, problem + lie, problem + come with.* residir en = lie (in), rest on/upon.* * *residir [I1 ]vi2 «encanto/interés» (radicar) residir EN algo; to lie in sthsu originalidad reside en su fórmula natural its originality lies in its natural compositionla soberanía reside en el pueblo sovereignty is vested in the people* * *
residir ( conjugate residir) verbo intransitivo
residir verbo intransitivo
1 (habitar) to reside: habitualmente reside en Estocolmo, his usual place of residence is Stockholm
reside en Bristol desde hace tres años, he has been living in Bristol for three years
2 (consistir, radicar) to reside, consist [en, in]: el truco reside en ceder el primero, the trick lies in being the first to give in
3 (estar depositado) la soberanía reside en el pueblo, sovereignty resides in the people
' residir' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
domiciliar
English:
live
- reside
* * *residir vi1. [vivir] to reside2. [radicar] to lie, to reside (en in);el atractivo del proyecto reside en su bajo costo the attractive thing about the project is its low cost;el poder legislativo reside en el Congreso legislative power lies with o rests with Congress* * *v/i reside;residir en fig lie in* * *residir vi1) vivir: to reside, to dwell2)residir en : to lie in, to consist of* * *residir vb to live / to reside -
125 salvaje
adj.1 wild (animal, terreno).el salvaje oeste the wild West2 savage (pueblo, tribu).3 brutal, savage (cruel, brutal).f. & m.1 savage (primitivo).2 brute (bruto).unos salvajes prendieron fuego a un inmigrante some inhuman brutes set fire to an immigrant* * *► adjetivo2 (animal) wild3 (pueblo, tribu) savage, uncivilized5 (bruto) uncouth, boorish6 figurado (incontrolado) haphazard, uncontrolled1 (no civilizado) savage2 figurado (violento) savage3 (bruto) brute, boor* * *1. noun mf. 2. adj.1) savage2) wild* * *1. ADJ1) [planta, animal, tierra] wild2) (=no autorizado) [huelga] unofficial, wildcat; [construcción] unauthorized3) [pueblo, tribu] savage4) (=brutal) savage, brutalun salvaje asesinato — a brutal o savage murder
5) LAm * (=estupendo) terrific *, smashing *2.SMF (lit, fig) savage* * *I1)a) < animal> wildc) <vegetación/terreno> wild2) ( cruel) <persona/tortura> brutal; <ataque/matanza> savageII* * *= uncivilised [uncivilized, -USA], savage, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], swingeing, savage, barbarian, barbarian, in the wild, feral, brutish.Ex. It was on the tip of his tongue to say: 'Must you speak to me in this uncivilized fashion?' But he discreetly forbore.Ex. The most vulnerable nations are Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, which have all experienced savage war and civil unrest in recent years.Ex. The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Ex. Faced with the prospect of a swingeing cut of 15% in the periodical budget, the library had to determine which titles could be cancelled with least damage to the integrity of the research collections.Ex. The father is ultimately a figure of fun and the archetype of an irrational savage.Ex. The article is entitled 'Waiting for the barbarians? Multicultural public library services in Australia 1985-1992'.Ex. The writer examines the hierarchy and organization of barbarian churches that developed in the western Roman Empire in late antiquity.Ex. I spoke of capturing e-scholarship disseminated outside the library, or, as one librarian put it, ' in the wild'.Ex. The film offers a repulsive creature whose croaks and drools recall the demonic child in The Exorcist, instead of the feral but relatively articulate person that Morrison created.Ex. In his most famous work, the Leviathan, Hobbes famously argued that life in the state of nature is 'solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short'.----* crecer salvaje = grow + rampant.* flor salvaje = wildflower [wild flower].* gato salvaje = feral cat.* monte salvaje = backcountry.* regiones salvajes de Africa, las = wilds of Africa, the.* vida salvaje = wildlife.* zonas salvajes del interior = back country.* * *I1)a) < animal> wildc) <vegetación/terreno> wild2) ( cruel) <persona/tortura> brutal; <ataque/matanza> savageII* * *= uncivilised [uncivilized, -USA], savage, wild [wilder -comp., wildest -sup.], swingeing, savage, barbarian, barbarian, in the wild, feral, brutish.Ex: It was on the tip of his tongue to say: 'Must you speak to me in this uncivilized fashion?' But he discreetly forbore.
Ex: The most vulnerable nations are Burma, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, which have all experienced savage war and civil unrest in recent years.Ex: The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Ex: Faced with the prospect of a swingeing cut of 15% in the periodical budget, the library had to determine which titles could be cancelled with least damage to the integrity of the research collections.Ex: The father is ultimately a figure of fun and the archetype of an irrational savage.Ex: The article is entitled 'Waiting for the barbarians? Multicultural public library services in Australia 1985-1992'.Ex: The writer examines the hierarchy and organization of barbarian churches that developed in the western Roman Empire in late antiquity.Ex: I spoke of capturing e-scholarship disseminated outside the library, or, as one librarian put it, ' in the wild'.Ex: The film offers a repulsive creature whose croaks and drools recall the demonic child in The Exorcist, instead of the feral but relatively articulate person that Morrison created.Ex: In his most famous work, the Leviathan, Hobbes famously argued that life in the state of nature is 'solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short'.* crecer salvaje = grow + rampant.* flor salvaje = wildflower [wild flower].* gato salvaje = feral cat.* monte salvaje = backcountry.* regiones salvajes de Africa, las = wilds of Africa, the.* vida salvaje = wildlife.* zonas salvajes del interior = back country.* * *A1 ‹animal› wild2 (primitivo) ‹tribu› savage3 ‹vegetación/terreno› wildB (cruel) ‹persona/tortura› brutal; ‹ataque/matanza› savagehay que ser salvaje para decirle eso a una pobre anciana ( fam); you have to be pretty cruel o brutal o nasty to say a thing like that to an old lady ( colloq)se vuelve muy salvaje cuando está borracho he gets very vicious o brutal when he's drunkC ‹construcción› uncontrolled, illegal; ‹camping› unauthorizedpara controlar la colocación salvaje de carteles to control illegal o unauthorized bill posting1 (primitivo) savagete comportaste como un salvaje you behaved like a savage o an animal* * *
salvaje adjetivo
1
2 ( cruel) ‹persona/tortura› brutal;
‹ataque/matanza› savage
■ sustantivo masculino y femenino ( primitivo) savage;
( bruto) (pey) animal, savage
salvaje
I adjetivo
1 Bot Zool wild: el tigre es un animal salvaje, the tiger is a wild animal
2 (terreno) uncultivated
3 (cultura, tribu) savage
4 (comportamiento) cruel, brutal
5 (incontrolable, imparable) huelga salvaje, protracted strike
6 pey (inculto, maleducado) uncouth
(zoquete) thick: no seas salvaje, claro que fue Colón, don't be so thick, of course it was Columbus
II m, f
1savage
2 fam (bruto) animal, savage
' salvaje' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
brava
- bravo
- lado
- selvática
- selvático
- bestia
- indomable
English:
abundance
- frazzled
- loose
- rice
- savage
- savagely
- wild
- wilderness
- wildness
- cut
- vicious
* * *♦ adj1. [animal] wild2. [planta, terreno] wild3. [pueblo, tribu] savage4. [cruel, brutal] brutal, savage;se escuchó una explosión salvaje there was a massive explosion;el capitalismo salvaje ruthless capitalismuna huelga salvaje an unofficial strike, a wildcat strike;vertidos salvajes illegal dumping♦ nmf1. [primitivo] savage2. [bruto] brute;unos salvajes prendieron fuego a un inmigrante some inhuman brutes set fire to an immigrant;la salvaje de tu hermana ha suspendido todas las asignaturas your thick sister has failed every subject;es un salvaje, se comió un pollo él sólo he's an animal, he ate a whole chicken by himself;eres un salvaje, ¿cómo tratas así a tu madre? you're a monster, how can you treat your mother like that?* * *I adj1 animal wild2 ( bruto) brutalII m/f savage* * *salvaje adj1) : wildanimales salvajes: wild animals2) : savage, cruel3) : primitive, uncivilizedsalvaje nmf: savage* * *salvaje adj1. (animal) wild2. (tribu) savage -
126 sepultar
v.to bury.* * *1 to bury* * *VT1) (=enterrar) [gen] to bury; [en mina] to trap, bury2) (=ocultar) to hide away, conceal* * *verbo transitivoa) (frml) < muerto> to inter (frml), to buryb) (period) ( cubrir)* * *= inter, bury.Ex. The author talks about the funerary role played by chapter houses where bishops or important patrons were interred.Ex. And if the topic does become tomorrow's carrion, it would not, perhaps, be inappropriate that it was buried under its own dead horse subject heading.* * *verbo transitivoa) (frml) < muerto> to inter (frml), to buryb) (period) ( cubrir)* * *= inter, bury.Ex: The author talks about the funerary role played by chapter houses where bishops or important patrons were interred.
Ex: And if the topic does become tomorrow's carrion, it would not, perhaps, be inappropriate that it was buried under its own dead horse subject heading.* * *sepultar [A1 ]vt2 ( period)(cubrir): el pueblo quedó sepultado bajo las aguas the town was totally submergedlos montañeros fueron sepultados por un alud de nieve the mountaineers were buried o ( liter) entombed by an avalanche* * *
sepultar ( conjugate sepultar) verbo transitivo
b) (period) ( cubrir):
sepultar verbo transitivo
1 to bury, entomb
2 fig (cubrir) conceal, bury
' sepultar' also found in these entries:
English:
bury
- engulf
* * *sepultar vt1. [enterrar] to bury2. [cubrir] to bury;el corrimiento de tierras sepultó a diez personas the landslide buried ten people;la avalancha sepultó el pueblo the avalanche buried the village* * *v/t bury* * *sepultar vtenterrar: to bury* * * -
127 sintonía
f.1 tuning, syntony, syntonization.2 signature tune, signature.* * *1 (de radio) tuning■ aquí en la sintonía de Radio Terrassa... here on Radio Terrassa...2 (música) signature tune\estar en sintonía con alguien to be in tune with somebody, be on somebody's wavelength* * *SF1) (Radio) [del dial] tuning2) (Radio) (=melodía) signature tune3) [entre personas]* * *a) (Rad, TV)la música de sintonía — the theme music o tune
b) ( audiencia)c) ( armonía)* * *----* estar en sintonía con = attune to.* mantener en sintonía = keep in + step.* no estar en sintonía con = be out of step with.* sintonía de anuncio publicitario = jingle.* * *a) (Rad, TV)la música de sintonía — the theme music o tune
b) ( audiencia)c) ( armonía)* * ** estar en sintonía con = attune to.* mantener en sintonía = keep in + step.* no estar en sintonía con = be out of step with.* sintonía de anuncio publicitario = jingle.* * *1 ( Rad, TV):botón de sintonía tuning knobestán ustedes en la sintonía de Radio Victoria you are listening to o you are tuned to Radio Victoriapara una mejor sintonía for better receptionla música de sintonía the theme music o tune2(audiencia): uno de los programas de mayor sintonía one of the most listened-to/watched programs3(armonía): en sintonía con el pueblo in tune with the people, on the same wavelength as the people* * *
sintonía sustantivo femeninoa) (Rad, TV):
para una mejor sintonía for better receptionb) ( armonía):
sintonía sustantivo femenino
1 Rad TV (melodía de un programa, una emisora) theme o signature tune
2 Elec Rad (recepción, sintonización) tuning
3 fig (armonía, entendimiento) hay una perfecta sintonía entre nosotros, there is a perfect understanding between us
' sintonía' also found in these entries:
English:
tune
- signature
* * *sintonía nf1. [música] theme tune, Br signature tune;la sintonía del telediario the TV news theme (tune)2. [conexión] tuning;están ustedes en la sintonía de Radio 4 this is Radio 43. [compenetración] harmony;sus ideas están en sintonía con las mías her ideas are in line with mine;sus ideas están en sintonía con la voluntad de la mayoría her ideas are in tune with the wishes of the majority* * *f1 melodía theme tune, signature tune2 RAD tuning, reception;estar en la sintonía de be tuned to;estar en sintonía con fig be in tune with* * *sintonía nf1) : tuning in (of a radio)2)en sintonía con : in tune with, attuned to -
128 sometimiento
m.1 submission.evitar el sometimiento a los rayos del sol keep out of direct sunlight (en frasco, envoltorio)2 subjugation (dominio).* * *1 (dominación) subjection, subjugation2 (presentación, propuesta) submission, presentation* * *SM1) (=dominación) [de un pueblo] subjugationtras el sometimiento de los celtas, los romanos... — after the subjugation of the Celts, the Romans...
2) (=sumisión)a) [por la fuerza] subjection (a to)siglos de sometimiento al patriarcado — centuries of subjection to o being subject to patriarchy
b) [voluntariamente] [a la autoridad] submission (a to)[a la ley] compliance (a with)rechazan el sometimiento a la autoridad — they refuse to submit to o bow to authority
3) (=exposición)como consecuencia de su sometimiento a estímulos externos — as a result of being subjected to external stimuli
4) (=entrega) [de propuesta] submission (a to)tras pocos días de su sometimiento a la aprobación del pleno — a few days after its submission to the plenary session for approval
* * *1) ( de un pueblo) subjection, subjugation2)a) ( a autoridad) submission; ( a ley) complianceb) (a prueba, proceso) subjection* * *= subjugation.Ex. For over 500 years, the state of libraries and librarianship has been a reliable measure of varying degrees of freedom and subjugation in these countries.* * *1) ( de un pueblo) subjection, subjugation2)a) ( a autoridad) submission; ( a ley) complianceb) (a prueba, proceso) subjection* * *= subjugation.Ex: For over 500 years, the state of libraries and librarianship has been a reliable measure of varying degrees of freedom and subjugation in these countries.
* * *A (de un pueblo) subjection, subjugationB1 (a una autoridad) submission; (a una ley) compliancemanifestó su sometimiento a la ley he declared his compliance with the law2 (a una prueba, un proceso) subjectionpara su sometimiento a pruebas bacteriológicas so that they can be subjected to o can undergo bacteriological tests, so that bacteriological tests can be carried out on themel sometimiento de los presos a torturas the subjection of the prisoners to torture, the torturing of the prisoners* * *
sometimiento sustantivo masculino
1 submission
2 (a la autoridad) subjugation
' sometimiento' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
opresión
* * *sometimiento nm1. [dominio] subjugation2. [a autoridad, ley] submission3. [a interrogatorio, pruebas] subjection* * ** * *sometimiento nm1) : submission, subjection2) : presentation
См. также в других словарях:
Pueblo — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Para otros usos de este término, véase pueblo (desambiguación). Pueblo (del latín populus) es el conjunto de personas de una nación, aunque también puede entenderse como el de parte de un país, el de una región o el… … Wikipedia Español
pueblo — sustantivo masculino 1. Población pequeña: Las costumbres de las ciudades son menos tradicionales que las de los pueblos. Mucha gente de los pueblos vive de la agricultura. 2. Conjunto de personas que viven en un lugar, región o país: el pueblo… … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
Pueblo — Pueb lo, n. [Sp., a village, L. populus people. See {People}.] A communistic building erected by certain Indian tribes of Arizona and New Mexico. It is often of large size and several stories high, and is usually built either of stone or adobe.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Pueblo — Pueblo, CO U.S. city in Colorado Population (2000): 102121 Housing Units (2000): 43121 Land area (2000): 45.076181 sq. miles (116.746768 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.296224 sq. miles (0.767216 sq. km) Total area (2000): 45.372405 sq. miles… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
Pueblo, CO — U.S. city in Colorado Population (2000): 102121 Housing Units (2000): 43121 Land area (2000): 45.076181 sq. miles (116.746768 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.296224 sq. miles (0.767216 sq. km) Total area (2000): 45.372405 sq. miles (117.513984 sq.… … StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places
pueblo — ☆ pueblo [pweb′lō ] n. pl. pueblos; also, for pueblo 2, PUEBLO [pweb′lōz] [Sp, village, people < L populus, PEOPLE] 1. a type of communal village built by certain Amerindian peoples of the SW U.S. and parts of Latin America, consisting of one… … English World dictionary
pueblo — (n.) Indian village, 1808, from Sp. pueblo village, small town, from L. populum, accusative of populus people … Etymology dictionary
pueblo — puȅblo m <G a> DEFINICIJA naziv za tip naselja Pueblo Indijanaca na JZ SAD a; građen od opeka ili kamenih ploča ETIMOLOGIJA amer.šp.: grad, narod ← lat. populus … Hrvatski jezični portal
pueblo — (Del lat. popŭlus). 1. m. Ciudad o villa. 2. Población de menor categoría. 3. Conjunto de personas de un lugar, región o país. 4. Gente común y humilde de una población. 5. País con gobierno independiente. ☛ V. defensor del pueblo … Diccionario de la lengua española
Pueblo — [pweb′lō] [see PUEBLO] city in SC Colo., on the Arkansas River: pop. 102,000 … English World dictionary
Puēblo [1] — Puēblo (span., »Ortschaft«), s. Puebloindianer … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon