paco
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
paco (countable and uncountable, plural pacos or pacoes)
paco f
paco (accusative singular pacon, plural pacoj, accusative plural pacojn)
Borrowed from Esperanto paco, English peace, French paix, Italian pace, Spanish paz, ultimately from Latin pāx.
paco (uncountable)
Borrowed from Spanish paco, from Quechua p'aqu.
paco m (plural pachi)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
paco
From Proto-Italic *pakō, from Proto-Indo-European *peh₂ḱ- (“to join, fasten”); or, a denominal formed from pāx (“peace”) + -ō (verb-forming suffix).
pācō (present infinitive pācāre, perfect active pācāvī, supine pācātum); first conjugation
paco
paco f
Borrowed from Quechua p'aqu (“rojizo”).
paco (feminine paca, masculine plural pacos, feminine plural pacas)
paco m (plural pacos, feminine paca, feminine plural pacas)
See paca.
Unknown; possibly related to pacífico (“peaceful”), (pejoratively) referring to the police as a peacekeeping force.
Of imitative origin (presumably of gunfire).
paco m (plural pacos, feminine paca, feminine plural pacas)
Of unclear origin. Possibly a shortening of pasta de cocaína, or a corruption of basuco (“cocaine paste”).
paco m (plural pacos)
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