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Competidor de fusteAn idiom is an expression whose meaning is not readily apparent based on the individual words in the expression. This forum is dedicated to discussing idioms and other sayings. |
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#4
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"Hombre de fuste" = "man of substance (importance").
Source: Cassell's Spanish-English Dictionary.
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#5
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I had never heard this saying (maybe it's specific, but not common)
![]() Nervio, sustancia o entidad. Hombre de fuste. http://buscon.rae.es/draeI/SrvltCons...S=3&LEMA=fuste ![]() |
#6
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I have hear it often.
For the meaning, agree with irmamar ![]() Wen I readed it for the first time, as I was a child, I though its origin was from "fusta", a whip for horses, so a "hombre de fuste" was someone able to resists whips. ![]() ![]() Later I learned the fact that "fuste" is an arquitectonic term, wich refers to the shaft of a column So a "hombre de fuste" is a man which has a solid body, physical or mental. Saludos ![]()
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