farpa
Galician
editVerb
editfarpa
- inflection of farpar:
Portuguese
editEtymology
editPronunciation
edit
Noun
editfarpa f (plural farpas)
- splinter (long, sharp fragment of material, often wood)
- (figuratively, chiefly in the plural) taunt, jibe (facetious or insulting remark)
- 2009, Marcelino Rodriguez, O Tigre De Deus Em Seu Jardim, Clube de Autores, page 46:
- Por que tentar partir? Eres comigo. Sou contigo. Poderei viver sem rezar sobre seu corpo? Ou sem trocarmos as farpas diárias? Ou sem vê-la de certo modo? Meu imenso amor é pouco, se é tudo? Não, não fujas. Creio, infelizmente, que não ...
- Why try to leave? You are with me. I am with you. Will I be able to live without praying over your body? Or without exchanging the daily taunts? Or without seeing you in a certain way? Is my immense love little, if it is everything? No, don’t flee. I believe, unfortunate, that it isn’t […]
- 2014, Nora Roberts, Entre o Céu e a Terra, Leya, →ISBN:
- Voltara a trocar pequenas farpas com Mia, como se tudo aquilo que acontecera na clareira não fosse nada de especial. Era um escudo inacreditável que ela carregava, pensou Mac. Quase tão impressionante quanto o outro, aquele que o ...
- He had began exchanging small taunts with Mia, as if everything that had happened in the clearing was nothing special. What she was carrying was an unbelievable shield, thought Mac. Almost as impressive as the other one, the one that […]
Spanish
editEtymology
editFrom obsolete farpar (“scratch, claw, rend”), a borrowing of Old French harper (“grasp forcefully”) from Proto-Germanic *hrapōną (“scrape”). Related to Spanish harapo (“rag”).
Noun
editfarpa f (plural farpas)
Further reading
edit- “farpa”, in Diccionario de la lengua española [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (in Spanish), online version 23.8, Royal Spanish Academy [Spanish: Real Academia Española], 2024 December 10
Categories:
- Galician non-lemma forms
- Galician verb forms
- Portuguese terms borrowed from Spanish
- Portuguese terms derived from Spanish
- Portuguese 2-syllable words
- Portuguese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Portuguese lemmas
- Portuguese nouns
- Portuguese countable nouns
- Portuguese feminine nouns
- Portuguese terms with quotations
- Spanish terms derived from Old French
- Spanish terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Spanish lemmas
- Spanish nouns
- Spanish countable nouns
- Spanish feminine nouns