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Spanish Land-word Loanwords

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June 12, 2006, 08:52
wordcrafter
Spanish Land-word Loanwords
Spanish has given us several words to name features of our landscape. We start with one rooted in a lovely metaphor.

bolson – a flat arid valley surrounded by mountains (can drain into a shallow central lake)
[Spanish bolsa, 'purse, pouch'; ultimately traces back to Greek 'wineskin']Bonus word:
bivouac
– a temporary camp without tents or cover (verb: to stay in such a camp)
June 13, 2006, 07:58
wordcrafter
Here is another Spanish-loanward rooted in a metaphor.

sierra – a range of mountains having an irregular or jagged profile
[From from Spanish for 'saw'. The Latin root also gives us 'serrated'.]

Mountains along the California/Nevada border are often called the Sierra Mountains (rather than 'the Sierras'). Technically that's improper, since 'sierra' implies mountains.
June 14, 2006, 06:43
wordcrafter
llano – an open grassy plain, treeless or nearly so
June 15, 2006, 06:45
wordcrafter
paramo – a high, bleak plateau or district, with stunted trees, and cold, damp atmosphere, as in the AndesBonus word:
puna
1. a high bleak plateau in the Peruvian Andes 2. difficulty of breathing due to thin atmosphere; mountain sickness
June 16, 2006, 06:44
wordcrafter
cuesta – a ridge with a gentle slope on one side and a cliff on the other; a gentle upward slope ending in a steep drop
[Spanish, from Latin costa, side]
June 17, 2006, 09:46
wordcrafter
arroyo – a deep and usually dry gully cut by an intermittent stream Bonus word:
hogback
– a long steep hill or mountain ridge
June 17, 2006, 10:43
jerry thomas
Overcoming my fear of interrupting your train of thought, Wordcrafter, I'd like to offer buckaroo, which obviously evolved from Spanish vaca (cow) and vaquero (cowherd)
June 18, 2006, 10:30
wordcrafter
Absolutely no problem, JT. By the way, vaquero has also come into English as a recognized word.
June 18, 2006, 10:32
wordcrafter
If you have $20 million to spend, today's post will give you a shopping tip.

cay – a small, low island of coral or sand
[Sp. cayo shoal, rock, barrier-reef]
Key (as in the Florida 'keys') is a variant of the same word.
June 19, 2006, 10:35
LlamaLadySG
Actually, a hogback describes a specific type of landform caused by tilting of rocks with a resistant layer. The ridge has a dip-slope (top of the resistant layer) and a steeper slope on the opposite side, where the underlying more easily eroded rocks are exposed. The ridge often has a sharp crest of the harder rock, which resembles the hair that sticks up on a wild hog's back. In fact, the name for a landform similar to a hogback (but with shallower dip) is another land-word loanword "cuesta" meaning hill in Spanish.

For a complete definition see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dip_slope

quote:
Originally posted by wordcrafter:
arroyo – a deep and usually dry gully cut by an intermittent stream
    Over hogbacks, down into wooded watersheds, arroyos that carry the snowmelt down to the big river. Only a trickle now.
    – Summer Wood, Arroyo: A Novel
Bonus word:
hogback
– a long steep hill or mountain ridge