Can you say “linduro”?
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Okay so I've been searching Spanish nicknames and if you refer to a girl, you can call her lindura which they say means cutie or beauty (depending on which site you're on). Would the male version of it be linduro? Since they often do that in Spanish I thought so, but while searching I can't find anything that suggests so. They don't find anything and instead I get even more sites talking about lindura... Can anyone help me out?
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up vote
3
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Okay so I've been searching Spanish nicknames and if you refer to a girl, you can call her lindura which they say means cutie or beauty (depending on which site you're on). Would the male version of it be linduro? Since they often do that in Spanish I thought so, but while searching I can't find anything that suggests so. They don't find anything and instead I get even more sites talking about lindura... Can anyone help me out?
traducción
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
Okay so I've been searching Spanish nicknames and if you refer to a girl, you can call her lindura which they say means cutie or beauty (depending on which site you're on). Would the male version of it be linduro? Since they often do that in Spanish I thought so, but while searching I can't find anything that suggests so. They don't find anything and instead I get even more sites talking about lindura... Can anyone help me out?
traducción
Okay so I've been searching Spanish nicknames and if you refer to a girl, you can call her lindura which they say means cutie or beauty (depending on which site you're on). Would the male version of it be linduro? Since they often do that in Spanish I thought so, but while searching I can't find anything that suggests so. They don't find anything and instead I get even more sites talking about lindura... Can anyone help me out?
traducción
traducción
asked 5 hours ago
Greta Tesorro
282
282
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1 Answer
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"lindura" is the abstract noun for the adjective "lindo" or "linda" and has therefore no masculine. Being an abstract noun, you can use it to refer to a man or a woman indistinctly.
In my country, we never use it. Instead, we use "preciosura" (the quality of being "precioso/preciosa") or "belleza" (the quality of being "bello/bella") or "hermosura" (the quality of being "hermoso/hermosa").
Such abstract nouns can be deemed to be used to mean that the person in question is, more than just beautiful, the embodiment of beauty.
Aw thank you so much!! <3
– Greta Tesorro
4 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
"lindura" is the abstract noun for the adjective "lindo" or "linda" and has therefore no masculine. Being an abstract noun, you can use it to refer to a man or a woman indistinctly.
In my country, we never use it. Instead, we use "preciosura" (the quality of being "precioso/preciosa") or "belleza" (the quality of being "bello/bella") or "hermosura" (the quality of being "hermoso/hermosa").
Such abstract nouns can be deemed to be used to mean that the person in question is, more than just beautiful, the embodiment of beauty.
Aw thank you so much!! <3
– Greta Tesorro
4 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
"lindura" is the abstract noun for the adjective "lindo" or "linda" and has therefore no masculine. Being an abstract noun, you can use it to refer to a man or a woman indistinctly.
In my country, we never use it. Instead, we use "preciosura" (the quality of being "precioso/preciosa") or "belleza" (the quality of being "bello/bella") or "hermosura" (the quality of being "hermoso/hermosa").
Such abstract nouns can be deemed to be used to mean that the person in question is, more than just beautiful, the embodiment of beauty.
Aw thank you so much!! <3
– Greta Tesorro
4 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
"lindura" is the abstract noun for the adjective "lindo" or "linda" and has therefore no masculine. Being an abstract noun, you can use it to refer to a man or a woman indistinctly.
In my country, we never use it. Instead, we use "preciosura" (the quality of being "precioso/preciosa") or "belleza" (the quality of being "bello/bella") or "hermosura" (the quality of being "hermoso/hermosa").
Such abstract nouns can be deemed to be used to mean that the person in question is, more than just beautiful, the embodiment of beauty.
"lindura" is the abstract noun for the adjective "lindo" or "linda" and has therefore no masculine. Being an abstract noun, you can use it to refer to a man or a woman indistinctly.
In my country, we never use it. Instead, we use "preciosura" (the quality of being "precioso/preciosa") or "belleza" (the quality of being "bello/bella") or "hermosura" (the quality of being "hermoso/hermosa").
Such abstract nouns can be deemed to be used to mean that the person in question is, more than just beautiful, the embodiment of beauty.
answered 4 hours ago
Gustavson
7,8791626
7,8791626
Aw thank you so much!! <3
– Greta Tesorro
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Aw thank you so much!! <3
– Greta Tesorro
4 hours ago
Aw thank you so much!! <3
– Greta Tesorro
4 hours ago
Aw thank you so much!! <3
– Greta Tesorro
4 hours ago
add a comment |
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