Suggested by ... Monika
1. Fondant cooked and stretched very thin and twisted bars.
2. Person delicate body and complexion. Colloquial
3. Valeriana.
Andalucía 4. Composure, grooming. unusual colloquial

2. Person delicate body and complexion. Colloquial
3. Valeriana.
Andalucía 4. Composure, grooming. unusual colloquial
The word comes from Arabic weakling Hispanic fa [and] nid , which in turn was taken from the classical Arabic fānīd , and that the Persian pānid , who came from the Sanskrit PHANIT " cane juice concentrate or juice squeezed from sugar cane to produce sugar by vaporization " ...
Y. .. precisely, the first of the meanings of weakling is describing a cooked fondant stretched very thin, twisted bars, which is used to make sweets. By extension semantics, we have the second meaning: "b deposit very thin, twisted " we apply the term to "weak and feeble ." ;-)
In Andalucía (Spain) , also weakling is synonymous with "valerian ": a herbaceous plant, used in medicine as an antispasmodic. And if this were not enough, we still have fourth meaning for our voice now equivalent to " composure," "grooming , although he has clearly fallen obsolete ...
to the next word! :)
to the next word! :)
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