burla

(Englisch)

burlar

  1. (transitive) to outwit, to outsmart, to circumvent, to trick, to deceive
  2. (transitive) to circumvent, to evade, to cheat
  3. (reflexive) to make fun of, to poke fun at, to mock, to ridicule, to jeer (+ de)
  4. (reflexive) to taunt, to tease (often uses de)
  5. (reflexive) to scoff, to scoff at (+ de)
  6. (reflexive) to deceive oneself (+ de)

Frequenz

C1
Mit Bindestrich als
bur‧la
Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/ˈbuɾla/
Etymologie (Englisch)

In summary

Uncertain. The Real Academia Española suggests Vulgar Latin *burrula, from burrae, from Late Latin burra (“trifles; nonsense, trickery”) (compare, however, borla, which would be a doublet). Also see Italian burla. Possibly a cognate with English bureau.

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