"Se Usará Grúa"
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twballard
February 01, 2010, 12:47 PM
I saw the above posted in "no parking" zones everywhere. I assume it conveys the message that violators will be towed, but I am having trouble understanding why "Grúa" which I understand to mean "crane" and which seems to me to be more appropriate for referring to a type of construction machinery.
Is the word also routinely used to mean "towtruck" or have I completely missed the point?
Perikles
February 01, 2010, 12:59 PM
I saw the above posted in "no parking" zones everywhere. I assume it conveys the message that violators will be towed, but I am having trouble understanding why "Grúa" which I understand to mean "crane" and which seems to me to be more appropriate for referring to a type of construction machinery.
Is the word also routinely used to mean "towtruck" or have I completely missed the point?You are quite right. It is used routinely for that here in Tenerife, and they do in fact look like a crane fitted on to the back of the lorry.
They also use the word pala = spade or shovel for a JCB which should be excavadora. I suppose they only look at the bit that matters. :lol:
Edit: It is illegal to tow a vehicle in Spain, so I guess that the first gruas were indeed cranes to lift cars onto the lorry.
pjt33
February 01, 2010, 04:23 PM
You are quite right. It is used routinely for that here in Tenerife
Aquí en Valencia también.
and they do in fact look like a crane fitted on to the back of the lorry.
Pero eso no aquí.
AngelicaDeAlquezar
February 01, 2010, 05:36 PM
@twballard: You're right. The message means cars parked at those areas will be towed.
"Grúa" is a crane and also the truck equipped with a crane to lift and tow cars. New towtrucks don't have an obvious crane, but they're called so as an extension of the original name for those vehicles.
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