Crossword clues for spanish
spanish
- European language
- Where "abalone" comes from
- Tijuana tongue
- Language in Lima
- La Paz language
- Kind of onion, rice or omelet
- Canary tongue
- __ rice
- What's spoken in Barcelona
- What mayo might be
- Predominant language in Miami
- Onion or omelet
- Language that utilizes the letter "ñ"
- Language that gave us "aficionado"
- Language spoken on Telemundo
- Language of Chile
- Language of 100,000,000
- Language in which "foot" is "pie"
- It's heard a lot in Los Angeles
- From Madrid
- Dali's tongue
- Cordovan, e.g
- AP exam subject
- "Cómo está usted?" language
- Former name for Caribbean coast
- High school subject
- Where El NiГ±o comes from
- Cordovan, e.g.
- See 92-Down
- Florida colonizers, with "the"
- "CГіmo estГЎ usted?" language
- Language that utilizes the letter "Г±"
- The Romance language spoken in most of Spain and the countries colonized by Spain
- The people of Spain
- Where El Niño comes from
- "C"
- Colo.'s ___ Peaks
- _____ rice
- ___ Main
- Cervantes's tongue
- Kind of "Eyes" in a song
- Kind of omelet
- Olive or omelet
- Kind of moss
- W European bridge is high at the start
- From Valencia or Malaga?
- Bridge is beginning to hinder one means of communication
- Institution set up in 1478 by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella to safeguard Catholic orthodoxy
- Don Quixote's tongue
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Spanish \Span"ish\, a. Of or pertaining to Spain or the Spaniards. Spanish bayonet (Bot.), a liliaceous plant ( Yucca alorifolia) with rigid spine-tipped leaves. The name is also applied to other similar plants of the Southwestern United States and mexico. Called also Spanish daggers. Spanish bean (Bot.) See the Note under Bean. Spanish black, a black pigment obtained by charring cork. --Ure. Spanish broom (Bot.), a leguminous shrub ( Spartium junceum) having many green flexible rushlike twigs. Spanish brown, a species of earth used in painting, having a dark reddish brown color, due to the presence of sesquioxide of iron. Spanish buckeye (Bot.), a small tree ( Ungnadia speciosa) of Texas, New Mexico, etc., related to the buckeye, but having pinnate leaves and a three-seeded fruit. Spanish burton (Naut.), a purchase composed of two single blocks. A double Spanish burton has one double and two single blocks. --Luce (Textbook of Seamanship). Spanish chalk (Min.), a kind of steatite; -- so called because obtained from Aragon in Spain. Spanish cress (Bot.), a cruciferous plant ( Lepidium Cadamines), a species of peppergrass. Spanish curlew (Zo["o]l.), the long-billed curlew. [U.S.] Spanish daggers (Bot.) See Spanish bayonet. Spanish elm (Bot.), a large West Indian tree ( Cordia Gerascanthus) furnishing hard and useful timber. Spanish feretto, a rich reddish brown pigment obtained by calcining copper and sulphur together in closed crucibles. Spanish flag (Zo["o]l.), the California rockfish ( Sebastichthys rubrivinctus). It is conspicuously colored with bands of red and white. Spanish fly (Zo["o]l.), a brilliant green beetle, common in the south of Europe, used for raising blisters. See Blister beetle under Blister, and Cantharis. Spanish fox (Naut.), a yarn twisted against its lay. Spanish grass. (Bot.) See Esparto. Spanish juice (Bot.), licorice. Spanish leather. See Cordwain. Spanish mackerel. (Zo["o]l.)
A species of mackerel ( Scomber colias) found both in Europe and America. In America called chub mackerel, big-eyed mackerel, and bull mackerel.
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In the United States, a handsome mackerel having bright yellow round spots ( Scomberomorus maculatus), highly esteemed as a food fish. The name is sometimes erroneously applied to other species. See Illust. under Mackerel.
Spanish main, the name formerly given to the southern portion of the Caribbean Sea, together with the contiguous coast, embracing the route traversed by Spanish treasure ships from the New to the Old World.
Spanish moss. (Bot.) See Tillandsia (and note at that entry).
Spanish needles (Bot.), a composite weed ( Bidens bipinnata) having achenia armed with needlelike awns.
Spanish nut (Bot.), a bulbous plant ( Iris Sisyrinchium) of the south of Europe.
Spanish potato (Bot.), the sweet potato. See under Potato.
Spanish red, an ocherous red pigment resembling Venetian red, but slightly yellower and warmer.
--Fairholt.Spanish reef (Naut.), a knot tied in the head of a jib-headed sail.
Spanish sheep (Zo["o]l.), a merino.
Spanish white, an impalpable powder prepared from chalk by pulverizing and repeated washings, -- used as a white pigment.
Spanish windlass (Naut.), a wooden roller, with a rope wound about it, into which a marline spike is thrust to serve as a lever.
Spanish \Span"ish\, n. The language of Spain.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1200, Spainisc, from Spaine "Spain," from Old French Espaigne (see Spaniard) + -ish. Replaced Old English Speonisc. Altered 16c. by influence of Latin. As a noun, "the Spanish language," from late 15c.\n
\nFor Spanish Main see main. Spanish moss is attested from 1823. Spanish fly, the fabled aphrodisiac (ground-up cantharis blister-beetles), is attested from c.1600. Spanish-American War was so called in British press speculations early 1898, even before it began in April. For Spanish Inquisition (by c.1600), see Inquisition.
Wiktionary
vb. (context printing English) To subject to spanishing, a printing process in which an ink is deposited on the bottoms and sides of depressions formed in a plastic material
WordNet
Gazetteer
Wikipedia
Spanish may refer to:
- anything of, from, or related to the country and nation of Spain
- Spanish people (or Spaniards), an ethnic group
-
Spanish language, a Romance language
- Spanish dialects, variants of the Spanish language
- Spanish cuisine, traditional foods
- Spanish mythology, traditional religion
- The Spanish Empire, the empire administered by Spain from the 15th century
"Spanish" is the fourth UK single from Craig David's second album Slicker Than Your Average. The song became his tenth top ten hit in the UK (including his Artful Dodger collaborations), peaking at number eight and spending six weeks inside the top 75. "Spanish" saw David incorporate a Spanish element into his music for the first time including on the track Spanish rapper Duke One. In Australia "Spanish" was skipped and " World Filled with Love" was released as the fourth single there.
Usage examples of "spanish".
Togarmi, Abulafia freely sprinkled his texts with codes, acrostics, and number-letter puns to simultaneously befuddle his persecutors and communicate freely with knowledgeable Spanish mystics like Joseph Gikatilia, a respected member of his circle.
He is standing knee-deep in some anguineous backwater of New Orleans swampland, feeling the mystic transport of his fellow creatures, the water witches and the Peremelfait, shrouded festively in the ghost-shapes of drowned pirates, decorated with Spanish moss and kudzu.
He granted an exclusive privilege to the English for furnishing the Spanish West Indies with negroes, according to the assiento contract.
Mandarin, and only had enough Spanish to follow soccer broadcasts when the Anglophone nets were preoccupied with baseball or hockey, but he thought he could get by long enough to land a job.
Spanish affairs, which they all agreed in approving, Prince Andrew began to express a contrary opinion.
Rice 1 40 Cacao 3 20 Coffee 3 50 Farina 75 Tapioca 3 00 Pure rubber 11 50 Plassaba cord 6 50 Tobacco 1 50 Sarsparilla 11 50 The Brazilian arroba is seven pounds heavier than the Spanish.
He is conversing with the Spanish Ambassador, who, like all the rest, is superbly attired, though not in armour, and is followed by a crowd of lacqueys in jerkins and hose of black satin, guarded with silver.
He still believed that Azul Island had played a part in the Spanish colonization of the New World.
Russkie who had sat next to Catherina on the bus, was climbing over the barrera, down into the ring, a bottle of champagne in one hand, a wide, idiotic grin on his face, his shaved head bearing a sheen of sweat in the Spanish sun.
Sunday bedizened in Spanish finery, with such a blaze and rustle, that the good vicar had to remonstrate humbly with Mrs.
Brownings and 9mm Lahtis, Polish Radoms, Italian Berretta autos, and Glisenti revolvers, a few dozen Russian Nagant revolvers in poor shape, three different configurations of Spanish Astra pistols, some practically new 7.
The Spanish bourgeoisie saw their chance of crushing the labour movement, and took it, aided by the Nazis and by the forces of reaction all over the world.
The formal music for the branle and galliard, the charconne and allemande and pavane and the Spanish minuet blew pattering like tinfoil through the peach trees, suffocated by the drawling French of English thoraxes and the polite, beautiful French of the most highly cultured courtiers in the world.
Special: Norwegian brisling sardines in Italian olive oil heaped on German schwarzbrot, with a layer of thinly sliced Spanish onion and a dollop of French dressing.
He brought me an actor, who also gave me Spanish lessons, for he pronounced the language admirably.