Find the word definition

Gazetteer
Wikipedia
Lúcio

Lucimar Ferreira da Silva (born 8 May 1978), commonly known as Lúcio, is a Brazilian footballer who plays for FC Goa of the Indian Super League as a central defender.

He is a strong defender with good aerial play, who also adds presence in the attack. Lúcio began his professional career in 1998 with Sport Club Internacional. After three years in the club, he moved to Bayer Leverkusen, with whom he reached the 2002 Champions League final against Real Madrid of Spain. He scored a header in the final, which Real Madrid won with the score of 2–1. In 2004, he arrived at Bayern Munich, where he won one German Cup and three Bundesliga titles. Since coach Louis van Gaal did not have a place for him at Bayern, he decided to search for a new team. He moved to Inter in the summer of 2009, and helped Inter Milan win the 2010 Champions League against his former club Bayern Munich.

With Brazil, Lúcio has accumulated a number of significant accomplishments, winning the 2002 World Cup, 2005 Confederations Cup and 2009 Confederations Cup.

Lucio

Lucio is an Italian, Spanish, male given name derived from the Latin name Lucius. In Portuguese the given name is accented Lúcio

Lucio is also an Italian surname.

It may be refer to: People

  • " Lúcio", (Lucimar Ferreira da Silva) (1978–), Brazilian footballer
  • Eduardo Lúcio Esteves Pereira (1954–), Portuguese goalkeeper, an earlier football "Lúcio"
  • Lucio Amanti (born 1977), a Canadian cellist
  • Lucio Battisti (1943–1998), Italian singer-songwriter
  • Lucio Blanco, Mexican military officer
  • Lúcio Carlos Cajueiro Souza (born 1979), Brazilian footballer
  • Lúcio Costa (1902–1998), Brazilian architect and urban planner.
  • Lucio Dalla (1943–2012), Italian singer-songwriter
  • Lúcio Teófilo da Silva (born 1984), Brazilian football player
  • Lucio A. Arreola (born 1970), Mexican economist and professor
  • Lucio Diodati (born 1955), Italian painter
  • Lucio Fontana (1899–1968), Italian painter and sculptor
  • Lucio Fulci (1927–1996), Italian horror film director
  • Lucio Gutiérrez (1957–), former president of Ecuador from 2003–2005
  • Lucio Serrani (born 1961), Italian hammer thrower
  • Lúcio Soares (1934–1988), Portuguese footballer
  • Lucio Urtubia (born 1931), Spanish anarchist
  • Lúcio Cardoso
  • Lúcio Wagner

Surname

  • Francisco Andres Lucio, American record producer, singer-songwriter, musician and DJ
  • Shannon Lucio, American actress

Others include those sometimes given Italian surnames:

  • Hanibal Lucić (1485–1553) known in Italian as Annibale Lucio, Croatian language poet and playwright from Venetian Dalmatia
  • Johannes Lucius Croatian: Ivan Lučić, Italian: Giovanni Lucio (1604–1679) historian
  • Lucius Accius, Roman tragic poet
  • Lucius Annaeus Seneca, Roman philosopher

It may also refer to:

  • A minor character in Shakespeare's Measure for Measure

Usage examples of "lucio".

Tonight, the train had been filled prior to his involvement, and he had merely to bring it up to the line to receive his payment from Lucio Salazar.

He had only to mind his business and guide it along toward Estacion Lucio, as it were.

A drop of it, one drop administered to the food or drink Lucio Salazar was renowned for consuming with boundless passion, and the Sleeper inside him would begin its ferocious process of incubation.

Moreover, only the merest few would even suspect Lucio had been murdered.

It was a principle that was understood from the brothers and sons who would be Lucio Salazar's successors, down the line to his street-level dealers and enforcers.

Most important to Lucio, he'd ducted himself okay, showed integrity, before and They had reached a compromise agreement that tisfied everyone involved, cemented it with a hand and Enrique had observed it to the letter.

The prepubescent Lucio already looking after his younger brothers, looking to survive on the street, long years from becoming the clan leader of Los Magos.

Hands wrapped about his arms and legs, lifted him into the air, placed him on the shoulders of the Provost and Lucio, who carried him forward in triumph to the foot of the stage.