cristiano

See also: Cristiano

Aragonese

Etymology

Adjective

cristiano m sg (feminine singular cristiana, neuter singular cristiano, masculine and neuter plural cristianos, feminine plural cristianes)

  1. christian

Noun

cristiano m (plural cristianos)

  1. a christian

References


Italian

Etymology

From Latin Christiānus.

Adjective

cristiano (feminine singular cristiana, masculine plural cristiani, feminine plural cristiane)

  1. Christian

Noun

cristiano m (plural cristiani, feminine cristiana)

  1. a Christian
  2. (Naples) a person

See also

Anagrams


Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin Christiānus; it is popular or inherited in some dialects of Spain (and pronounced as a three-syllable word)[1].

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /kɾisˈtjano/, [kɾisˈt̪jano]

Adjective

cristiano (feminine singular cristiana, masculine plural cristianos, feminine plural cristianas) (superlative cristianísimo)

  1. Christian (of the Christian religion)

Alternative forms

Derived terms

Noun

cristiano m (plural cristianos, feminine cristiana, feminine plural cristianas)

  1. Christian (member of the Christian religion)
  2. (colloquial) guy (person)
    Synonyms: tipo, fulano (pejorative), gallo (Chile)

Alternative forms

Descendants

Further reading

References

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