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Castro

  • 1 Castro

    Castro

    Vocabulario Castellano-Catalán > Castro

  • 2 castro

    m.
    1 Place where an army is encamped.
    2 Ruins of ancient fortified places. (Provincial)
    3 Game played by boys.
    4 Act of taking honey-combs out of hives.
    5 Castro, Fidel Castro Ruz.
    6 camp.
    pres.indicat.
    1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: castrar.
    * * *
    SM
    1) (=fortaleza) hill-fort
    2) ( Hist) Iron-Age settlement
    * * *
    masculino fort
    * * *
    masculino fort
    * * *
    fort
    * * *
    castro nm
    = pre-Roman fort

    Spanish-English dictionary > castro

  • 3 castro

    s.m. castro

    Diccionario Español-Gali > castro

  • 4 castro

    гл.
    археол. городище

    Испанско-русский универсальный словарь > castro

  • 5 castro

    • camp

    Diccionario Técnico Español-Inglés > castro

  • 6 castro

    m вж. castración.

    Diccionario español-búlgaro > castro

  • 7 Fidel Castro

    m.
    Fidel Castro, Fidel Castro Ruz.

    Spanish-English dictionary > Fidel Castro

  • 8 fidelismo

    policies and ideology of Fidel Castro; (periodo) the Castro years; (régimen) Castro regime

    Spanish-English dictionary > fidelismo

  • 9 copia impresa

    f.
    hard copy, printout.
    * * *
    (n.) = printout [print-out], print copy, print-off
    Ex. Libraries of the future will spend larger and larger portions of their budgets not on books, but to finance patrons' acquisitions of print-outs of desired documents located through the online catalogue.
    Ex. In the first phase of the project, print copies were delivered to UMI by vehicle.
    Ex. However, these 'libraries' also had a substantial number and apparently growing collection of materials from the U.S. and numerous website print-offs from anti-Castro groups.
    * * *
    (n.) = printout [print-out], print copy, print-off

    Ex: Libraries of the future will spend larger and larger portions of their budgets not on books, but to finance patrons' acquisitions of print-outs of desired documents located through the online catalogue.

    Ex: In the first phase of the project, print copies were delivered to UMI by vehicle.
    Ex: However, these 'libraries' also had a substantial number and apparently growing collection of materials from the U.S. and numerous website print-offs from anti-Castro groups.

    Spanish-English dictionary > copia impresa

  • 10 documento impreso

    (n.) = printout [print-out], paper document, print-off
    Ex. Libraries of the future will spend larger and larger portions of their budgets not on books, but to finance patrons' acquisitions of print-outs of desired documents located through the online catalogue.
    Ex. The organisation and retrieval of paper documents are discussed in the light of new perspectives opened up by optical discs, hypertext and artificial intelligence.
    Ex. However, these 'libraries' also had a substantial number and apparently growing collection of materials from the U.S. and numerous website print-offs from anti-Castro groups.
    * * *
    (n.) = printout [print-out], paper document, print-off

    Ex: Libraries of the future will spend larger and larger portions of their budgets not on books, but to finance patrons' acquisitions of print-outs of desired documents located through the online catalogue.

    Ex: The organisation and retrieval of paper documents are discussed in the light of new perspectives opened up by optical discs, hypertext and artificial intelligence.
    Ex: However, these 'libraries' also had a substantial number and apparently growing collection of materials from the U.S. and numerous website print-offs from anti-Castro groups.

    Spanish-English dictionary > documento impreso

  • 11 fuera de servicio

    = off-duty, decomissioned, out of commission
    Ex. An off-duty doorman was coshed over the head as he confronted a man smashing up his car outside a nightclub, a jury heard.
    Ex. He then decided to solve the mystery of the death of an reporter who was killed while nosing about in a decommissioned navy yard.
    Ex. It is being reported that after the surgery, Fidel Castro would be out of commission for two months.
    * * *
    = off-duty, decomissioned, out of commission

    Ex: An off-duty doorman was coshed over the head as he confronted a man smashing up his car outside a nightclub, a jury heard.

    Ex: He then decided to solve the mystery of the death of an reporter who was killed while nosing about in a decommissioned navy yard.
    Ex: It is being reported that after the surgery, Fidel Castro would be out of commission for two months.

    Spanish-English dictionary > fuera de servicio

  • 12 prostituta

    f.
    prostitute.
    * * *
    1 prostitute
    * * *
    f., (m. - prostituto)
    * * *
    = prostitute, whore, slut, courtesan, tart, hooker, slag, slapper, strumpet.
    Ex. The unholy and more holy sources of community information are mentioned from pimps and prostitutes to the preacher and the policeman.
    Ex. In penitentiaries, nuns & whores shared a similar lifestyle & regimen, reducing the social & moral space between them.
    Ex. The ratings war between TV programmes has produced an emphasis on 'nuts, sluts, & perverts' & their victims, & discussion of sexual problems are commonplace on TV talk shows.
    Ex. This essay examines the status of courtesans in the Roman Empire.
    Ex. She loves wearing lots of make up and looking like a tart.
    Ex. The actual quotation from Castro's 1992 speech reads as follows: 'There are hookers, but prostitution is not allowed in our country'.
    Ex. Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex. Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex. She was is a bit of a strumpet and was nearly killed by her husband on her wedding night when he discovered that she was pregnant.
    ----
    * conductor que busca los servicios de una prostituta = kerb-crawler [curb-crawler, -USA].
    * solicitar los servicios de una prostituta desde el coche = kerb-crawling [curb-crawling, -USA].
    * trabajar como prostituta en la calle = work + the streets.
    * * *
    = prostitute, whore, slut, courtesan, tart, hooker, slag, slapper, strumpet.

    Ex: The unholy and more holy sources of community information are mentioned from pimps and prostitutes to the preacher and the policeman.

    Ex: In penitentiaries, nuns & whores shared a similar lifestyle & regimen, reducing the social & moral space between them.
    Ex: The ratings war between TV programmes has produced an emphasis on 'nuts, sluts, & perverts' & their victims, & discussion of sexual problems are commonplace on TV talk shows.
    Ex: This essay examines the status of courtesans in the Roman Empire.
    Ex: She loves wearing lots of make up and looking like a tart.
    Ex: The actual quotation from Castro's 1992 speech reads as follows: 'There are hookers, but prostitution is not allowed in our country'.
    Ex: Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex: Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex: She was is a bit of a strumpet and was nearly killed by her husband on her wedding night when he discovered that she was pregnant.
    * conductor que busca los servicios de una prostituta = kerb-crawler [curb-crawler, -USA].
    * solicitar los servicios de una prostituta desde el coche = kerb-crawling [curb-crawling, -USA].
    * trabajar como prostituta en la calle = work + the streets.

    * * *

     

    prostituta sustantivo femenino prostitute
    ' prostituta' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    macarra
    - zorra
    - golfa
    - puta
    English:
    call-girl
    - kerb-crawling
    - prostitute
    - solicit
    - soliciting
    - streetwalker
    - hooker
    * * *
    prostitute
    * * *
    f prostitute
    * * *
    prostituta n prostitute

    Spanish-English dictionary > prostituta

  • 13 puta

    intj.
    fuck.
    f.
    * * *
    1 tabú prostitute, whore
    \
    de puta madre tabú great, brilliant, bloody fantastic
    de puta pena tabú dreadful, bloody awful
    ir de putas tabú to go whoring
    ni puta idea tabú not a bloody clue
    pasarlas putas tabú to go through hell
    * * *
    femenino (vulg & pey) ( prostituta) prostitute, whore (colloq & pej), hooker (colloq)

    hijo (de) putason of a bitch (vulg), bastard (vulg)

    * * *
    = whore, slut, tart, hooker, slag, slapper, strumpet.
    Ex. In penitentiaries, nuns & whores shared a similar lifestyle & regimen, reducing the social & moral space between them.
    Ex. The ratings war between TV programmes has produced an emphasis on 'nuts, sluts, & perverts' & their victims, & discussion of sexual problems are commonplace on TV talk shows.
    Ex. She loves wearing lots of make up and looking like a tart.
    Ex. The actual quotation from Castro's 1992 speech reads as follows: 'There are hookers, but prostitution is not allowed in our country'.
    Ex. Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex. Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex. She was is a bit of a strumpet and was nearly killed by her husband on her wedding night when he discovered that she was pregnant.
    ----
    * casa de putas = brothel, bawdy house [bawdyhouse].
    * de puta madre = fantastic, wicked, swell, the dog's bollocks, the bee's knees, the cat's meow, the cat's pyjamas, the cat's whiskers, badass.
    * de puta pena = appalling, deplorable, awful.
    * hijo de puta = rotter.
    * ir de putas = whoring.
    * no tener ni puta idea = not get + Posesivo + shit together.
    * no tener ni puta idea sobre Algo = not know the first thing about.
    * pasarlas putas = jump through + hoops, be to hell and back.
    * * *
    femenino (vulg & pey) ( prostituta) prostitute, whore (colloq & pej), hooker (colloq)

    hijo (de) putason of a bitch (vulg), bastard (vulg)

    * * *
    = whore, slut, tart, hooker, slag, slapper, strumpet.

    Ex: In penitentiaries, nuns & whores shared a similar lifestyle & regimen, reducing the social & moral space between them.

    Ex: The ratings war between TV programmes has produced an emphasis on 'nuts, sluts, & perverts' & their victims, & discussion of sexual problems are commonplace on TV talk shows.
    Ex: She loves wearing lots of make up and looking like a tart.
    Ex: The actual quotation from Castro's 1992 speech reads as follows: 'There are hookers, but prostitution is not allowed in our country'.
    Ex: Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex: Sleeping around does not make a woman a slag or a slapper -- a look at sex, lies and sterotypes that still persist today.
    Ex: She was is a bit of a strumpet and was nearly killed by her husband on her wedding night when he discovered that she was pregnant.
    * casa de putas = brothel, bawdy house [bawdyhouse].
    * de puta madre = fantastic, wicked, swell, the dog's bollocks, the bee's knees, the cat's meow, the cat's pyjamas, the cat's whiskers, badass.
    * de puta pena = appalling, deplorable, awful.
    * hijo de puta = rotter.
    * ir de putas = whoring.
    * no tener ni puta idea = not get + Posesivo + shit together.
    * no tener ni puta idea sobre Algo = not know the first thing about.
    * pasarlas putas = jump through + hoops, be to hell and back.

    * * *
    A ( vulg pey) (prostituta) prostitute, whore ( colloq pej), hooker ( colloq)
    ir de putas to go whoring ( colloq)
    hijo (de) puta son of a bitch ( vulg), bastard ( vulg)
    hace un frío de la gran puta shit, it's freezing! ( vulg), it's goddamn ( AmE) o ( BrE) bloody cold! (sl)
    venía de un humor de la gran puta ( RPl); he was in a foul mood ( colloq)
    B ( vulg)
    (uso expletivo): ¡la puta! (expresandoasombro) shit! (sl), wow! ( colloq), jeez! ( AmE colloq), bloody hell! ( BrE sl) (— fastidio) shit! (sl), damn! ( colloq)
    mira que son lentos ¡la puta! they're so damned slow! ( colloq), they're so slow, damn them! ( colloq)
    nos/les fue como las putas ( Col vulg); we/they had a really lousy time ( colloq), we/they had a bloody awful time ( BrE sl)
    nos/les fue de putas ( Col vulg); we/they had an amazing time ( colloq)
    * * *

     

    puta sustantivo femenino (vulg & pey) ( prostituta) whore (colloq & pej), hooker (colloq);

    puta f pey whore

    ' puta' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    hijo
    English:
    son
    - whore
    - bastard
    - bugger
    - hooker
    - tart
    * * *
    puta nf
    1. muy Fam whore;
    ir o [m5] irse de putas to go whoring;
    ¡me cago en la puta! [indica enfado, contrariedad] fucking hell!, fuck it!;
    pasarlas putas to have a really shit time;
    ser más puta que las gallinas to be a real old tart o Br slag o Br slapper;
    RP
    de la gran puta: hace un frío de la gran puta it's Br bloody o US goddamn freezing;
    se armó un lío de la gran puta it was Br bloody o US goddamn chaos
    * * *
    f pop
    whore;
    ir(se) de putas pop go whoring
    * * *
    puta nf
    : whore, slut

    Spanish-English dictionary > puta

  • 14 traidor

    adj.
    1 treacherous, traitor, backstabbing, disloyal.
    2 treacherous, traitorous.
    m.
    1 traitor, snake in the grass, betrayer, double-crosser.
    2 backstabber.
    * * *
    1 treacherous
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 traitor
    * * *
    traidor, -a
    1.
    ADJ [persona] treacherous; [acto] treasonable
    2.
    SM / F traitor/traitress; (Teat) villain
    * * *
    I
    - dora adjetivo traitorous, treacherous
    II
    - dora masculino, femenino traitor
    * * *
    = treasonable, traitor, betrayer, snake in the grass, backstabber.
    Ex. Printers or publishers were sometimes shy of giving their real names -- usually because a book was treasonable, or libellous, or a piracy -- and for similar reasons they might give a false place of publication and a false date.
    Ex. President Fidel Castro denounced the independent librarians, along with other dissidents, as traitors who have conspired with U.S. diplomats to undermine Cuba's national sovereignty.
    Ex. Little did the betrayer know that the kiss of Judas would become a proverb in every nation.
    Ex. You can fend off a danger which you can see, but you are more liable to be taken unawares and be bitten by a snake in the grass.
    Ex. They won't change, because backstabber behavior has worked for them in the past.
    * * *
    I
    - dora adjetivo traitorous, treacherous
    II
    - dora masculino, femenino traitor
    * * *
    = treasonable, traitor, betrayer, snake in the grass, backstabber.

    Ex: Printers or publishers were sometimes shy of giving their real names -- usually because a book was treasonable, or libellous, or a piracy -- and for similar reasons they might give a false place of publication and a false date.

    Ex: President Fidel Castro denounced the independent librarians, along with other dissidents, as traitors who have conspired with U.S. diplomats to undermine Cuba's national sovereignty.
    Ex: Little did the betrayer know that the kiss of Judas would become a proverb in every nation.
    Ex: You can fend off a danger which you can see, but you are more liable to be taken unawares and be bitten by a snake in the grass.
    Ex: They won't change, because backstabber behavior has worked for them in the past.

    * * *
    treacherous, traitorous ( arch hum)
    masculine, feminine
    traitor traidor A algo traitor TO sth
    es un traidor a su patria/la causa he is a traitor to his country/the cause
    * * *

    traidor
    ◊ - dora adjetivo

    traitorous, treacherous
    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino
    traitor;
    traidor a algo traitor to sth
    traidor,-ora
    I adjetivo treacherous
    II sustantivo masculino y femenino traitor

    ' traidor' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    traidora
    English:
    fifth-columnist
    - traitor
    - treacherous
    * * *
    traidor, -ora
    adj
    1. [persona] [contra amigos, camaradas] treacherous;
    [contra el Estado] treasonous
    2. [tiempo, corriente] treacherous, dangerous
    3. [gesto, lágrimas] revealing, telltale
    nm,f
    traitor;
    es un traidor a la patria he's a traitor to his country
    * * *
    I adj treacherous
    II m, traidora f traitor
    * * *
    traidor, - dora adj
    : traitorous, treasonous
    : traitor
    * * *
    traidor n traitor

    Spanish-English dictionary > traidor

  • 15 Cuban Revolution

    The guerrilla campaign (1956-59) which started the Revolución cubana aimed to topple the corrupt regime of Fulgencio Batista and free Cuba from United States economic domination. The new government of January 1959 set in motion wide-ranging social and political reforms. When Fidel Castro Ruz announced the expropriation of foreign-owned companies, the US imposed a trade embargo which has lasted into the new century. After the unsuccessful invasion by CIA-trained Cuban exiles at the Bay of Pigs (Playa Girón), bilateral relations worsened and Cuba sought political and economic support from the communist block. When the USSR collapsed in 1991 the Cuban economy was in ruins. Some recovery was achieved in the 1990s thanks to the growth of international tourism and new industries such as pharmaceuticals.
    Cuba is criticized by the US for not adopting parliamentary democracy and the presence of a politically influential Cuban community in the United States has blocked normal relations between the countries. Castro argues that each country has the right to its own political system. In Latin America revolutionary Cuba has inspired political movements seeking to improve the lot of workers and peasants.

    Spanish-English dictionary > Cuban Revolution

  • 16 городище

    с. археол.
    vestigios (ruinas) de una ciudad, castro m, citania f

    БИРС > городище

  • 17 gusano

    m.
    1 worm (animal).
    gusano de luz glow worm
    3 worm (computing).
    * * *
    1 worm (oruga) caterpillar
    \
    gusano de seda silkworm
    * * *
    noun m.
    1) worm
    * * *
    1. SM
    1) [gen] worm; [de tierra] earthworm; [de mosca] maggot; [de mariposa, polilla] caterpillar
    2) (=persona) worm; (=ser despreciable) contemptible person; (=persona dócil) meek creature
    3) (Inform) worm
    4) Cuba ** pey nickname for Cuban refugees post-1959
    2.
    ADJ Cuba ** pey Cuban-refugee antes de s
    * * *
    1)
    a) ( como nombre genérico) worm; ( lombriz de tierra) earthworm, worm
    b) ( larva - de mariposa) caterpillar; (- de mosca) maggot
    2) (pey) ( persona despreciable) worm (pej)
    * * *
    = worm, worm, caterpillar, maggot.
    Ex. The article ' Worms in the field' describes a family of products based around a worm optical disc drive, comprising a worm drive, Image Scanner, Text Retrieval, OCR and Image-handling software.
    Ex. The article 'Computer viruses, Logic bombs, Trojan horses and worms: 'badware' in computers' reviews the different sorts of badware and what problems they cause.
    Ex. For MARC the journey from the caterpillar of the automation of card production to the beautiful butterfly of today has been long and largely successful.
    Ex. One last thought as a parting shot: it does seem that having once taken a bite out of the fruit of the tree of knowledge, we are to be banished from paradise forever, but we really have to eat the maggots in the fruit as well?.
    ----
    * gusano de seda = silkworm.
    * * *
    1)
    a) ( como nombre genérico) worm; ( lombriz de tierra) earthworm, worm
    b) ( larva - de mariposa) caterpillar; (- de mosca) maggot
    2) (pey) ( persona despreciable) worm (pej)
    * * *
    = worm, worm, caterpillar, maggot.

    Ex: The article ' Worms in the field' describes a family of products based around a worm optical disc drive, comprising a worm drive, Image Scanner, Text Retrieval, OCR and Image-handling software.

    Ex: The article 'Computer viruses, Logic bombs, Trojan horses and worms: 'badware' in computers' reviews the different sorts of badware and what problems they cause.
    Ex: For MARC the journey from the caterpillar of the automation of card production to the beautiful butterfly of today has been long and largely successful.
    Ex: One last thought as a parting shot: it does seem that having once taken a bite out of the fruit of the tree of knowledge, we are to be banished from paradise forever, but we really have to eat the maggots in the fruit as well?.
    * gusano de seda = silkworm.

    * * *
    A
    2 (larvade mariposa) caterpillar; (— de mosca) maggot; (— de otros insectos) grub, worm
    Compuestos:
    (Esp, Méx) glowworm
    silkworm
    C ( Inf) tb
    gusano2 -na
    masculine, feminine
    * * *

     

    gusano sustantivo masculino
    1

    ( lombriz de tierra) earthworm, worm

    (— de mosca) maggot;

    gusano de seda silkworm
    2 (pey) ( persona despreciable) worm (pej)
    gusano sustantivo masculino
    1 Zool worm
    (oruga) caterpillar
    (de mosca) maggot
    gusano de seda, silkworm
    2 (persona despreciable) worm: el jefe es un gusano the boss is a swine
    ' gusano' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    hebra
    English:
    maggot
    - worm
    * * *
    gusano nm
    1. [animal] worm
    2. [larva] grub;
    [de mariposa] caterpillar; [de mosca] maggot gusano de luz glow-worm;
    3. Informát worm
    4. Fam [persona despreciable] worm
    5. Fam Pey [exiliado cubano] = anti-Castro Cuban living in exile
    * * *
    m worm; de mosca maggot
    * * *
    gusano nm
    1) lombriz: worm, earthworm
    gusano de seda: silkworm
    2) : caterpillar, maggot, grub
    * * *
    1. (lombriz, etc) worm
    2. (oruga de mariposa) caterpillar

    Spanish-English dictionary > gusano

  • 18 gallego

    adj.
    Galician.
    m.
    Galician, native of Galicia.
    * * *
    1 Galician
    nombre masculino,nombre femenino
    1 (persona) Galician
    1 (idioma) Galician
    ————————
    1 (idioma) Galician
    * * *
    gallego, -a
    1. ADJ
    1) (=de Galicia) Galician
    2) LAm pey Spanish
    2. SM / F
    1) (=de Galicia) Galician
    2) LAm pey Spaniard
    3. SM
    1) (Ling) Galician
    2) (=viento) north-west wind
    GALLEGO Gallego, a romance language dating back to the 12th century and closely related to Portuguese, is spoken by most of the inhabitants of Galicia. During the Franco régime, the use of Galician and other minority national languages was prohibited in the media and in public institutions. It has enjoyed lengua cooficial status alongside castellano since 1981. There are several dialects of the language and formal attempts to standardize them in the 1970s were unsuccessful. However, a standard form is now beginning to emerge naturally in the larger urban areas.
    See:
    ver nota culturelle LENGUAS COOFICIALES in lengua
    * * *
    I
    - ga adjetivo
    a) ( de Galicia) Galician
    b) (AmL fam) ( español) Spanish
    II
    - ga masculino, femenino
    a) ( de Galicia) Galician
    b) (AmL fam) ( español) Spaniard
    c) gallego masculino (Ling) Galician
    •• Cultural note:
    The language of Galicia, spoken by around 3 million people. It is an official requirement for many official and academic positions, and a compulsory school subject. Galician, a Romance language close to Portuguese, was banned under Franco but with the return to democracy, it became an official language in Galicia beside Castilian. Nowadays there is Galician radio and television, and a considerable amount of publishing in the language. Galician has less social prestige than Catalan and Basque in their homelands. The middle classes have largely opted to use Castilian. See also lenguas cooficiales
    * * *
    I
    - ga adjetivo
    a) ( de Galicia) Galician
    b) (AmL fam) ( español) Spanish
    II
    - ga masculino, femenino
    a) ( de Galicia) Galician
    b) (AmL fam) ( español) Spaniard
    c) gallego masculino (Ling) Galician
    •• Cultural note:
    The language of Galicia, spoken by around 3 million people. It is an official requirement for many official and academic positions, and a compulsory school subject. Galician, a Romance language close to Portuguese, was banned under Franco but with the return to democracy, it became an official language in Galicia beside Castilian. Nowadays there is Galician radio and television, and a considerable amount of publishing in the language. Galician has less social prestige than Catalan and Basque in their homelands. The middle classes have largely opted to use Castilian. See also lenguas cooficiales
    * * *
    gallego1 -ga
    1 (de Galicia) Galician
    2 ( AmL fam) (español) Spanish
    gallego2 -ga gallego (↑ gallego a1)
    masculine, feminine
    A
    1 (de Galicia) Galician
    2 ( AmL fam) (español) Spaniard
    B
    gallego masculine ( Ling) Galician
    The language of Galicia, spoken by around 3 million people. It is an official requirement for many official and academic positions, and a compulsory school subject.
    Galician, a Romance language close to Portuguese, was banned under Franco but with the return to democracy, it became an official language in Galicia beside Castilian. Nowadays there is Galician radio and television, and a considerable amount of publishing.
    Galician has less social prestige than Catalan and Basque in their homelands. The middle classes have largely opted to use Castilian. See also lenguas cooficiales (↑ lengua a1).
    * * *

    gallego 1
    ◊ -ga adjetivo


    b) (AmL fam) ( español) Spanish

    ■ sustantivo masculino, femenino

    b) (AmL fam) ( español) Spaniard

    gallego 2 sustantivo masculino ( idioma) Galician
    gallego,-a
    I adjetivo
    1 Galician
    2 LAm pey Spanish
    II sustantivo masculino y femenino
    1 Galician, native of Galicia
    2 LAm pey Spaniard
    III m (idioma) Galician
    ' gallego' also found in these entries:
    Spanish:
    cepa
    - gallega
    English:
    Galician
    * * *
    gallego, -a
    adj
    1. [de Galicia] Galician
    2. CSur, Cuba Fam = sometimes pejorative term used to refer to a Spanish person
    nm,f
    1. [de Galicia] Galician
    2. CSur, Cuba Fam = sometimes pejorative term used to refer to a Spaniard, especially an immigrant
    nm
    [lengua] Galician
    GALLEGO
    Gallego (“Galician”) is one of the four official languages spoken in Spain. It is spoken in the northwestern region of Galicia. Like Spanish and Catalan, it stems from late Latin, and it has many similarities to Portuguese in grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation. For decades Galician was either banned or officially unrecognized, and as a consequence it was mainly spoken in traditional or rural areas. However, in recent times it has re-emerged with the support of the Galician nationalist movement and is being promoted as the official language for use in schools and education. Although many Galician-born authors have written mainly or exclusively in Spanish, one of Spain's greatest nineteenth century poets, Rosalía de Castro, wrote much of her poetry in Gallego. Today Galician is used by an increasing number of well-known authors, one of the best-known of whom is the poet and short story writer Manuel Rivas.
    * * *
    I adj
    1 Galician
    Spanish
    II m, gallega f
    1 Galician
    Spaniard
    III m idioma Galician
    * * *
    gallego, -ga adj
    1) : Galician
    2) fam : Spanish
    gallego, -ga n
    1) : Galician
    2) fam : Spaniard
    * * *
    gallego adj n Galician

    Spanish-English dictionary > gallego

  • 19 castrista

    adj. & m./f.
    Castroist.
    * * *
    1 Castroist
    1 Castroist
    * * *
    1.
    ADJ Castroist, Castroite
    2.
    SMF Castroist, Castroite
    * * *
    adj
    Castroist
    nmf
    Castroist

    Spanish-English dictionary > castrista

  • 20 foquismo

    SM LAm (Pol) a theory of guerrilla warfare advocated by Che Guevara and Fidel Castro

    Spanish-English dictionary > foquismo

См. также в других словарях:

  • Castro — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Castro puede referirse a: Contenido 1 Toponimia 1.1 de Chile 1.2 de EE. UU. 1.3 de España …   Wikipedia Español

  • Castro — bezeichnet: Castro (Familienname), einen Familiennamen; siehe dort Etymologie, Varianten, Namensträger Insbesondere Fidel Castro den ehemaligen kubanischen Staatspräsidenten Castro Mode, eine Modekette aus Israel Castro Puros, eine Zigarrenmarke… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Castro — may refer to:People with the surname Castro: *Fidel Castro, former president of Cuba *Raúl Castro, brother of Fidel Castro and current president of Cuba *Cipriano Castro, former president of Venezuela *Castro (surname), other people with this… …   Wikipedia

  • CASTRO (F.) — CASTRO FIDEL (1926 ) Fils d’un planteur de canne à sucre émigré de Galice, Fidel Castro est né le 13 août 1926 près de Birán, dans la province d’Oriente. Il suit l’école primaire chez les jésuites à Santiago de Cuba, d’abord au collège La Salle,… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • CASTRO — CASTRO, family name, widespread throughout the Sephardi and Marrano Diaspora, common also in Rome in a family deriving from a place of this name in the Papal States. In some cases, the name was changed to Crasto. In Europe the family was numerous …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Castro — is one of the most famous of all surnames, perhaps not surprisingly as it describes one who lived in a castle. It is found in various spellings in every European country, and has particularly aristocratic associations in Spain, Portugal and… …   Surnames reference

  • CASTRO (A.) — CASTRO AMÉRICO (1885 1972) L’œuvre d’Américo Castro s’accomplit en deux étapes: de 1910, date de ses premiers écrits, jusqu’à 1938; et de 1938 à sa mort. Dans sa première étape, Américo Castro s’intéresse surtout à la linguistique, à la… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • CASTRO, DE — CASTRO, DE, family of Marrano physicians in Hamburg, Germany. RODRIGO DE CASTRO (1550–1627) was active in medical practice in Lisbon where he was of service to the Spanish Armada before it sailed in 1588. In 1594 he settled in Hamburg, where he… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • CASTRO (G. de) — CASTRO GUILLÉN DE (1569 1631) De famille noble, Guillén de Castro y Bellvís fit tout d’abord une carrière militaire et civile à Valence et en Italie, avant de se fixer à Madrid où il fut en relation avec les plus illustres écrivains. Après avoir… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Castro — the Castro a fashionable area in San Francisco where many ↑homosexuals live Castro 2 Cas|tro, Fi|del (1927 ) a Cuban ↑communist leader who led the opposition to the ↑dictator Batista, and forced him to leave the country in 1954. Castro then… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Castro — (Скала,Греция) Категория отеля: 1 звездочный отель Адрес: Skala Patmos, Скала, 85500, Греция …   Каталог отелей

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