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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Aragonese

Aragonese \Ar`a*go*nese\, a. Of or pertaining to Aragon, in Spain, or to its inhabitants. -- n. sing. & pl. A native or natives of Aragon, in Spain.

Wiktionary
aragonese

a. Of, from, or pertaining to Aragon, the Aragonese people or the Aragonese language. n. A person from Aragon. n. 1 The language of Aragon, nowadays only spoken as a mother tongue by a few thousand people in some valleys of the Pyrenees. 2 The Spanish language spoken in Aragon when influenced by Aragonese traits.

Wikipedia
Aragonese

Aragonese or Aragones may refer to:

  • Something related to Aragon, an autonomous community and former kingdom in Spain
  • the Aragonese people, those originating from or living in the historical region of Aragon, in north-eastern Spain
  • the Aragonese language, a Romance language currently spoken in the northernmost area of Aragon
    • the Navarro-Aragonese language, a Romance language spoken in the Middle Ages in parts of the Ebro basin and Middle Pyrenees
  • Aragonese cuisine, refers to the typical dishes and ingredients of cuisine in the Aragon region of Spain
  • the Aragonese grape, also known as Grenache
  • the Aragones grape, also known as Alicante Bouschet
  • the music of Aragon
  • the medieval Kingdom of Aragon
    • the medieval Crown of Aragon, which included the Kingdom of Aragon as a constituent part
    • the list of Aragonese monarchs from the medieval Kingdom of Aragon
  • Aragonese Castle on the Italian island of Ischia, also known as Castello Aragonese
  • the Aragonese Crusade, part of the War of the Sicilian Vespers
  • Aragonés (surname)

Usage examples of "aragonese".

Aragon and the city of Zaragoza, where in a few days they would be holding solemn jousts for the Festival of San Jorge, and there he could win fame vanquishing all the Aragonese knights, which would be the same as vanquishing all the knights in the world.

Many critics have attempted to prove that Avellaneda was Aragonese on the basis of this statement, but Martin de Riquer states that it cannot be proved.

Don Quixote and Sancho withdrew to their room, leaving Don Juan and Don Jeronimo astonished by the mixture of intelligence and madness they had seen and convinced that these were the true Don Quixote and Sancho, not the ones described by the Aragonese author.

Don Quixote of La Mancha, composed not by Cide Hamete, its first author, but by an Aragonese who is, he says, a native of Tordesillas.

My stay lasted for a fortnight, during which time I was able to examine the manners and customs of the Aragonese, who were not subject to the ordinances of the Marquis of Aranda, as long cloaks and low hats were to be seen at every corner.

The Church of Nuestra Senora del Pilar is situated on the ramparts of the town, and the Aragonese fondly believe this portion of the town defences to be impregnable.

Sicilians considered this Aragonese King to be the natural successor to the crown.

Enriquez, a lackey named Rubio, the two Aragonese - Mesa and Insausti - and another whose name was Bosque.

Baffled in this - and I can imagine his fury, which has since been vented on the Aragonese - Philip sent his representatives and his jurists to accuse me before the Court of the Grand Justiciary and to conduct my prosecution.

He had raised an armed band, consisting of some Aragonese gentlemen and their servants, and with this he fell like a thunderbolt upon the Castilian men-at-arms and the familiars of the Inquisition.

North and the South Franks had ships there, as did the Spanish, the Aragonese, the Emirate of Granada, the Sultan of Morocco, the Hafsid caliph, the Grand Duchy of Sardinia, the King of Sicily, the Prince of Serbia, the Archcount of Corfu, and the King of Hungary.

They also wanted me on the fleet that is set to deal with the Aragonese, Barbary corsairs and the Genovese, too.

They had come there first twenty years earlier, this lovely spot where a sixteenth-century diplomat from Naples, Bernardo di Maggiore, was ambushed by Aragonese sympathizers and accused of siding against them in a conflict with the pope.

Naples, Bernardo di Maggiore, was ambushed by Aragonese sympathizers and accused of siding against them in a conflict with the pope.

Roman See for as long as I can recallboth the North and the South Franks had ships there, as did the Spanish, the Aragonese, the Emirate of Granada, the Sultan of Morocco, the Hafsid caliph, the Grand Duchy of Sardinia, the King of Sicily, the Prince of Serbia, the Archcount of Corfu, and the King of Hungary.