-
41 tepeguaje
-
42 f.º
f.º (abr de folio) folio, page
'f.º' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
A
- abadesa
- abadía
- abajeña
- abajeño
- abanderada
- abanderado
- abarrotería
- abdicación
- abeja
- aberración
- abertura
- abjuración
- ablución
- abnegación
- abogacía
- abogada
- abogado
- abolición
- abolladura
- abonada
- abonado
- abrasión
- abrazadera
- abreviación
- abreviatura
- absolución
- absorción
- abstemia
- abstemio
- abstención
- abstinencia
- abstracción
- abubilla
- abuela
- abulia
- abundancia
- abusón
- abusona
- acacia
- academia
- académica
- académico
- acampada
- acaparador
- acaparadora
- accidentada
- accidentado
- acción
- acedía
English:
affiliated
- affinity
- affirm
- affirmative
- affix
- afford
- afield
- aforementioned
- aforesaid
- afterlife
- airfield
- aloof
- amorphous
- ansaphone
- apostrophe
- Armenian
- artificial
- astrophysics
- atrophy
- autobiography
- autograph
- awful
- bailiff
- barefoot
- bashful
- beautiful
- beef
- before
- beforehand
- behalf
- belief
- beneficial
- beneficiary
- benefit
- bibliography
- bifocals
- biography
- blast-off
- bluff
- Bosnian
- bountiful
- brief
- briefing
- brushoff
- buff
- buffalo
- buffer
- bulletproof
- butterfingers
- calf
-
43 lobinia
f.locust tree, false acacia. -
44 chaparral
(Sp. model spelled same [t∫aparal] < chaparro 'short, stubby' probably of pre-Roman origin, and apparently related to the dialectal Basque term txapar(ra), a diminutive of saphar(ra) 'thicket' or 'hedge' plus the Spanish collective suffix -al)Texas: 1842. As Watts observes, it appears that this term originally applied exclusively to the scrub oak. It now refers to a number of thicket-forming, often thorny shrubs or small trees, and to a large dense thicket formed by these plants. It may also refer to a plain covered with such unruly brush (see also brasada). Clark indicates that this term applies especially to shrubs and trees of the genera Acacia, Ceanothus, Condalia, Forestiera, and Quercus. Hendrickson notes that this term has become recognized throughout the United States because of its use in western films. The DRAE references chaparral as a place covered in chaparros, which may be either a variety of shrublike oak trees with many branches, or a Central American malpighiaceous bush with clustered flowers, round fruit, and opposite leaves that are thick and petiolate. This second plant grows on dry plains and has thick, knotty, resistant branches used to make walking sticks. Santamaría defines chaparral as either the common name of a wild rhamnaceous plant native to central and northern Mexico ( Condalia obovata), or a place abounding in chaparros. Santamaría gives several definitions for chaparro. It is generally a bush found in tropical regions in the Americas whose rough-textured leaves are sometimes used as sandpaper and whose bark is rich in tannin. On the southern coast of Mexico, it refers to several varieties of oak trees of the genus Quercus. In Tabasco, Mexico, it is an isolated mass of vegetation formed by vines and short trees, and in all of Mexico it is the common name given to the Aythia collaris, a plant native to the northern part of the continent. Islas concurs with the definition given by Santamaría for chaparro in Tabasco, Mexico, but he says that it is a low-lying thicket.Alternate forms: chaparrelle, chaparro, chaperelle, chapparal, chapparall, chapparo, chapparral, chapperell, chapporal.Glossed by Watts as a type of live-oak brush native to southwest Texas. Chaparro prieto is glossed in the DM as a plant of the genus Mimosa. Also known ( in English) as chaparro prieto. -
45 locoweed
( loco [lóko] [see above])Missouri: 1844. Any of several poisonous leguminous plants that cause a sort of distemper in cattle known as loco (disease). The DARE notes that the two most common plants of this name are the milk vetch (a plant of the genus Astragalus), and Oxytropis lambertii.Also called loco, loco grass, loco plant, loco vetch. Santamaría references loco as a plant commonly called acacia in Mexico. However, he notes that this plant belongs to the genus Robinia, while English sources indicate that most plants known as locoweed are of the genera Oxytropis and Astragalus.
См. также в других словарях:
Acacia — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Acacia (homonymie) … Wikipédia en Français
acacia — [ akasja ] n. m. • 1553; acacie XIVe; lat. acacia, du gr. 1 ♦ Bot. Arbre à feuilles divisées en folioles, à fleurs jaunes, dont certaines espèces produisent la gomme arabique. Le mimosa est un acacia (cf. Bois d amourette). 2 ♦ Cour. Arbre à… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Acacia — • The Biblical Acacia belongs to the genus Mimosa Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Acacia Acacia † … Catholic encyclopedia
acacia — ACÁCIA, acacii, s.f. Nume dat arborilor sau arbuştilor tropicali din familia leguminoaselor, cu flori albe sau galbene, cultivaţi ca plante ornamentale, pentru industria parfumurilor şi pentru extragerea gumei arabice (Acacia). – Din lat., fr.… … Dicționar Român
ACACIA — (Heb. שִׁטָּה, shittah), a tree of Israel considered to be identical to the shittah tree. In the past it was extensively used for construction. Today it is planted to beautify the arid regions of Israel. Acacia wood is mentioned repeatedly (Ex.… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
acacia — (Del lat. acacĭa, y este del gr. ἀκακία). 1. f. Árbol o arbusto de la familia de las Mimosáceas, a veces con espinas, de madera bastante dura, hojas compuestas o divididas en hojuelas, flores olorosas en racimos laxos y colgantes, y fruto en… … Diccionario de la lengua española
acacia — familia de árboles y arbustos leguminosos. De algunos de ellos se extráen productos medicinales como el catecú de la Acacia catechu o la goma arábiga de la Acacia verek dibujo de herbario [véase http://www.iqb.es/diccio/a/ac1.htm#acacia]… … Diccionario médico
acacia — [ə kā′shə] n. [ME < OFr acacie < L acacia < Gr akakia, shittah tree, thorny tree; prob. < akē, a point, thorn < IE base * ak̑ : see ACID] 1. a) any of several trees, shrubs, or other plants (genus Acacia) of the mimosa family, with … English World dictionary
Acacia — A*ca cia, n.; pl. E. {Acacias}, L. {Acaci[ae]}. [L. from Gr. ?; orig. the name of a thorny tree found in Egypt; prob. fr. the root ak to be sharp. See {Acute}.] 1. A genus of leguminous trees and shrubs. Nearly 300 species are Australian or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
acacia — sustantivo femenino 1. Árbol o arbusto de varias especies, a veces con espinas, de hoja caduca y flores olorosas, dispuestas en racimos colgantes, del que se obtiene la goma arábiga. acacia blanca / falsa. acacia bastarda Endrino … Diccionario Salamanca de la Lengua Española
acacia — (n.) 1540s, from L. acacia, from Gk. akakia thorny Egyptian tree, perhaps related to Gk. ake point, thorn, from PIE root *ak sharp (see ACRID (Cf. acrid)). Or perhaps a Hellenization of some Egyptian word. From late 14c. in English as the name of … Etymology dictionary