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81 Sr.
adj.Mr., mister.* * *Sr.1 ( señor) mister; (abreviatura) Mr* * *ABR= Señor MrSee:ver nota culturelle DON/DOÑA in don* * *masculino (= señor) MrSr. (Don) Miguel López Ríos — (Corresp) Mr M. López Ríos, Miguel López Ríos, Esq (frml)
* * *masculino (= señor) MrSr. (Don) Miguel López Ríos — (Corresp) Mr M. López Ríos, Miguel López Ríos, Esq (frml)
* * *Sr.(= señor) Mr* * *
Sr. sustantivo masculino (◊ señor) Mr
Sr. (abr de señor) Mister, Mr
'Sr.' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alquilar
- el
- Ilma.
- Ilmo.
- señor
- pasar
English:
afraid
- amass
- amends
- attention
- classroom
- close-run
- crossroads
- dear
- declare
- disregard
- disrepair
- disrepute
- disrespect
- disrespectful
- esquire
- intervene
- Mr
- senior
- Esquire
- hold
- Sr
- title
* * *Sr. (abrev de señor)Mr* * *Sr.abr (= Señor) Mr.* * *Sr. nm: Mr. -
82 Srta.
adj.Miss.m.Miss.* * *Srta.1 ( señorita) miss* * *ABR= Señorita Miss, MsSee:ver nota culturelle DON/DOÑA in don* * *femenino (= señorita) Miss* * *femenino (= señorita) Miss* * *Srta.(= señorita) Miss* * *
Srta. sustantivo femenino (
Srta. (abr de señorita) Miss
'Srta.' also found in these entries:
English:
Ms
* * *Srta. (abrev de señorita)Miss* * *Srta.abr (= Señorita: Miss* * *Srta. orSrita. nf: Miss, Ms. -
83 tuno
adj.roguish, wicked.m.rogue, villain, rascal.* * *► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 rogue, crook1 (de la tuna) member of a tuna————————1 BOTÁNICA prickly pear————————1 (de la tuna) member of a tuna* * *tuno, -a1.SM / F (=pícaro) rogue, villain2.SM (Mús) member of a student music groupSee:ver nota culturelle TUNA in tuna* * *- na masculino, femenino1) (Esp fam) ( bribón) rascal (colloq)* * *- na masculino, femenino1) (Esp fam) ( bribón) rascal (colloq)* * *( fam):masculine, feminineB* * *
tuno,-a
1 m,f (pillo) rascal
2 sustantivo masculino member of a tuna
' tuno' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
tuna
* * *tuno, -a♦ adjes muy tuno he's a proper rascal♦ nm,f1. [tunante] rascal, rogue2. [músico] student minstrel* * *m, tuna f rogue -
84 venera
f.1 porcelain shell, or Mediterranean scallop, worn by pilgrims who return from St.2 badge, jewel, or star worn by the knights of military orders.3 vein of metal in a mine; spring of water.4 scallop shell, scallop, scollop, semicircular shell of the scallop.pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: venerar.* * *1 scallop* * *SF (Zool) scallop; (=concha) scallop shellver nota culturelle CAMINO DE SANTIAGO in camino* * *femenino scallop (shell)* * *femenino scallop (shell)* * *scallop, scallop shell* * *venera nf1. [concha] scallop shell2. [insignia] scallop -
85 Benemérita
SFla Benemérita — (=la Guardia Civil) the Civil Guard
See:ver nota culturelle GUARDIA CIVIL in guardia* * *La Benemérita the Civil Guard* * *
benemérita sustantivo femenino la Benemérita, the Spanish Civil Guard
* * *Benemérita nfEspla Benemérita = name given to the “Guardia Civil”* * *f Esp:la Benemérita the Civil Guard -
86 bono-loto SF
-
87 bonoloto SF
-
88 carlismo
m.Carlism (history).* * *1 Carlism* * *SM CarlismCARLISMO The controversial change which Ferdinand VII of Spain made to the law in order to allow his daughter Isabella to succeed him instead of his brother, Carlos María Isidro de Borbón, gave rise to Carlism, a movement supporting Carlos's claim to the throne. It also sparked off a series of armed conflicts. The First Carlist War (1833-1839) was declared by Carlos when Isabella came to the throne, the Second (1860) was started by his son of the same name, and the Third (1872-76) by a grandson, another Don Carlos. The last Carlist pretender, Alfonso, died in 1936 without descendants, although that did not prevent the Falange Española from later backing the Carlist cause in an attempt to prevent the current king, Juan Carlos, being designated Franco's successor. To this day there is still a Carlist party in Spain.See:ver nota culturelle FALANGE ESPAÑOLA in falange* * *Spain had three civil wars known as the guerras carlistas (1833-39, 1860, 1872-76). When Fernando VII died in 1833, he was succeeded not by his brother the Infante Don Carlos de Borbón, but by his daughter Isabel, under the regency of her mother María Cristina. This provoked a mainly northern-Spanish revolt, with local guerrillas pitted against the forces of the central government. The Carlist Wars were also a confrontation between conservative rural Catholic Spain, especially the Basque provinces and Aragón, led by the carlistas, and the progressive liberal urban middle classes allied with the army. Carlos died in 1855, but the carlistas, representing political and religious traditionalism, supported his descendants' claims until reconciliation in 1977 with King Juan Carlos.* * *carlismo nmHist Carlism, = support for the claim to the Spanish throne of Don Carlos de Borbón and his descendants after the death of his brother Fernando VII in 1833 -
89 D.a ABR
-
90 Da. ABR
-
91 EOI
SF ABR Esp= Escuela Oficial de IdiomasSee:ver nota culturelle ESCUELA OFICIAL DE IDIOMAS in escuela -
92 euskera SM
Basque, the Basque languageEUSKERA Spoken by over half a million people in the Western Pyrenees, Basque, which is a non-Indo-European language, has been one of Spain's lenguas cooficiales (along with catalán and gallego) since 1982. Originally spoken also in Burgos and the Eastern Pyrenees, it began to lose ground to Castilian from the 13th century onwards. Under Franco its use was prohibited in the media, but it began to experience a revival in the 1950s through semi-clandestine Basque-language schools called ikastolas. In 1968 the Academy of the Basque Language created a standardized form called euskera batua, an attempt to homogenize several divergent dialects. Nowadays there is Basque-language radio and television, and under the autonomous government the teaching of the language has become a cornerstone of educational policy.See:ver nota culturelle LENGUAS COOFICIALES in lengua -
93 eusquera SM
Basque, the Basque languageEUSKERA Spoken by over half a million people in the Western Pyrenees, Basque, which is a non-Indo-European language, has been one of Spain's lenguas cooficiales (along with catalán and gallego) since 1982. Originally spoken also in Burgos and the Eastern Pyrenees, it began to lose ground to Castilian from the 13th century onwards. Under Franco its use was prohibited in the media, but it began to experience a revival in the 1950s through semi-clandestine Basque-language schools called ikastolas. In 1968 the Academy of the Basque Language created a standardized form called euskera batua, an attempt to homogenize several divergent dialects. Nowadays there is Basque-language radio and television, and under the autonomous government the teaching of the language has become a cornerstone of educational policy.See:ver nota culturelle LENGUAS COOFICIALES in lengua -
94 eusquero SM
Basque, the Basque languageEUSKERA Spoken by over half a million people in the Western Pyrenees, Basque, which is a non-Indo-European language, has been one of Spain's lenguas cooficiales (along with catalán and gallego) since 1982. Originally spoken also in Burgos and the Eastern Pyrenees, it began to lose ground to Castilian from the 13th century onwards. Under Franco its use was prohibited in the media, but it began to experience a revival in the 1950s through semi-clandestine Basque-language schools called ikastolas. In 1968 the Academy of the Basque Language created a standardized form called euskera batua, an attempt to homogenize several divergent dialects. Nowadays there is Basque-language radio and television, and under the autonomous government the teaching of the language has become a cornerstone of educational policy.See:ver nota culturelle LENGUAS COOFICIALES in lengua -
95 facón
m.large knife, dagger.* * *SM Cono Sur long gaucho knifeSee:* * *( RPl)sheath knife* * *facón nmRP sheath knife;pelar el facón to unsheathe one's knife -
96 gongorismo
m.1 altiloquence, pompous language (poesía).2 gongorism, euphuism.* * *1 Gongorism* * *See:ver nota culturelle CULTERANISMO, CONCEPTISMO in culteranismo* * *Gongorism* * *gongorismo nmLit Gongorism -
97 huayno
-
98 ikastola
1 Basque school* * *See:ver nota culturelle EUSKERA in euskera* * *Basque school* * *ikastola nf= primary school in the Basque country where classes are given entirely in Basque -
99 jijona
1 type of soft nougat* * *See:ver nota culturelle TURRÓN in turrón* * ** * *jijona nf(turrón de) jijona = soft almond nougat from Jijona, Spain -
100 mapuche
adj.Mapuche.f. & m.Mapuche (indian).m.Mapuche (lengua).* * *1.ADJ Mapuche, Araucanian2.SMF Mapuche (Indian), Araucanian (Indian)See:ver nota culturelle ARAUCANO in araucano3.SM (Ling) Mapuche, Araucanian* * *Mapuche ( before n)mapuche (↑ mapuche a1)MapucheThe largest group of Araucanian-speaking South American Indians, living in the central valley of Chile. The Mapuche struggled for 350 years against Spanish and Chilean domination.After Chilean independence the Mapuche were put in reservations. In the 1980s, the Chilean government transferred ownership of the land to individual Mapuche, who risk losing their land if they incur debts that they cannot repay.Originally the Mapuche were one part of the Araucanian people but nowadays the two terms are used synonymously, as most Araucanians are Mapuche.* * *♦ adjMapuche♦ nmf[persona] Mapuche (indian)♦ nm[lengua] Mapuche
См. также в других словарях:
Nîmes — Pour l’article homophone, voir Nismes. 43° 50′ 16″ N 4° 21′ 39″ E … Wikipédia en Français
Historia de Túnez — Batalla de Zama, símbolo de la decadencia de la República cartaginesa … Wikipedia Español
Senlis (Oise) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Senlis. 49° 12′ 29″ N 2° 35′ 15″ E … Wikipédia en Français