Engelska | Spanska |
---|---|
gore [gores] (thick blood) noun [UK: ɡɔː(r)] [US: ˈɡɔːr] | crúornoun sangrenoun sangre cuajadanoun sangre de la heridanoun |
gore [gored, goring, gores] (to pierce with a horn) verb [UK: ɡɔː(r)] [US: ˈɡɔːr] | cogerverb cornearverb |
gore [gores] (triangular patch of fabric) noun [UK: ɡɔː(r)] [US: ˈɡɔːr] | gajonoun segmento triangularnoun |
gore [gores] (triangular piece of land where roads meet) noun [UK: ɡɔː(r)] [US: ˈɡɔːr] | cuchillanoun |
bigorexia (mental disorder) noun | vigorexianoun |
bigorexic (a person suffering from bigorexia) noun | vigoréxicanoun vigoréxiconoun |
bigorexic (suffering from bigorexia) adjective | vigoréxicoadjective |
egregore (psychic entity influencing thoughts) noun | egrégoranoun |
Pythagorean [Pythagoreans] (follower of Pythagoras) noun [UK: paɪ.ˌθæ.ɡə.ˈriːən] [US: paɪ.ˌθæ.ɡʌ.ˈriːən] | pitagóriconoun |
Pythagorean (of or relating to Pythagoras or his philosophy) adjective [UK: paɪ.ˌθæ.ɡə.ˈriːən] [US: paɪ.ˌθæ.ɡʌ.ˈriːən] | pitagóricoadjectivePythagorean thought was dominated by mathematics, but it was also profoundly mystical. = El pensamiento pitagórico estuvo dominado por la matemática, pero también era profundamente místico. |
Pythagorean theorem (mathematical theorem) proper noun [UK: paɪ.ˌθæ.ɡə.ˈriːən ˈθɪə.rəm] [US: paɪ.ˌθæ.ɡʌ.ˈriːən ˈθɪ.rəm] | teorema de Pitágorasproper noun |