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barranca
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Barranca

Barranca \Bar*ran"ca\, n. [Sp.] A ravine caused by heavy rains or a watercourse. [Texas & N. Mex.] [1913 Webster] ||

Wiktionary
barranca

n. A steep-sided gulch or arroyo; a canyon or ravine.

Wikipedia
Barranca

Barranca may refer to:

Usage examples of "barranca".

Benito Barranca, or wondering if Mindi was really happy with him, but he saw nothing he could do about it.

Benito Barranca darted through it, clutching a lifted blade that flashed like glass.

Reeling, stumbling, Barranca fell into the wall and slid slowly down until he sat propped against it, staring back with a sardonic red-freckled grimace.

Enlarged, the chart showed Corredores Barranca, Torres Barranca, Barranca Mundial.

To reach the Sun Country or Ciudad Barranca he would have to make his way against it, into the city and out again across El Rio de Dios.

Claudio Barranca pushed a hooded holophone aside and rose behind a barrier of computer consoles.

Pacing the floor to keep warm, he wondered if Barranca himself had created the computer simulation of the Revelator.

She laughed at him instead and turned to look for Benito Barranca, who came stalking through the ruins, red knife slashing, cutting down people trying to escape.

Ciudad Barranca and the park he had crossed lay naked to its savage glare.

The tank led them out of Ciudad Barranca and back across the empty park.

Off duty, he explored the ship and checked the fusion engine and studied the tech guides Thorsen had left and slept when he could in the cabin Benito Barranca had designed for himself.

Benito Barranca had employed Thorsen to build the spaceplane after the Kwans cut off research fundsbut he had found no better clue.

A Holyfolk terrorist, Benito Barranca, was found dead at the scenekilled by my father in his own defense.

From 1912 to 1914, Carlos Ameghino and his associates, working on behalf of the natural history museums of Buenos Aires and La Plata, discovered stone tools in the Pliocene Chapadmalalan formation at the base of a barranca, or cliff, extending along the seaside at Miramar.

Romero claimed all the formations in the barranca at Miramar were recent.