mendigo
See also: mendigó
English
Noun
mendigo (plural mendigos)
- A beggar.
- 1887, Fanny Chambers Gooch Iglehart, “chapter IX”, in Face to Face with the Mexicans:
- Sitting complacently upon a broken, fallen column, we beheld an object that filled us with horror—an Indian mendigo, a representation in one, of the ancient Aztec, the pobre Mexicano, and the gentleman of the nineteenth century.
Anagrams
Portuguese
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /mẽˈd͡ʒi.ɡu/
- (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /mẽˈd͡ʒi.ɡo/
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /mẽˈdi.ɡu/ [mẽˈdi.ɣu]
- (Brazil, colloquial) IPA(key): /mĩ.ˈd͡ʒi.ɡu/
- (Brazil, very colloquial) IPA(key): /mĩ.ˈd͡ʒĩ.ɡu/
- Hyphenation: men‧di‧go
Etymology 1
From Old Galician-Portuguese mendigo, from Latin mendīcus.
Quotations
For quotations using this term, see Citations:mendigo.
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /menˈdiɡo/ [mẽn̪ˈd̪i.ɣ̞o]
- Rhymes: -iɡo
- Syllabification: men‧di‧go
Related terms
Further reading
- “mendigo”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
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