secuela

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Galician[edit]

Galician Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia gl

Etymology[edit]

Learned borrowing from Latin sequēla

Noun[edit]

secuela f (plural secuelas)

  1. consequence, result
  2. aftereffect/after-effect, effect
  3. (medicine) sequela
  4. (narratology) sequel (a narrative that is written after another narrative set in the same universe, especially a narrative that is chronologically set after its predecessors, or (perhaps improper usage) any narrative that has a preceding narrative of its own)
    Antonym: precuela

Further reading[edit]

Spanish[edit]

Spanish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia es

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Latin sequēla.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /seˈkwela/ [seˈkwe.la]
  • Rhymes: -ela
  • Syllabification: se‧cue‧la

Noun[edit]

secuela f (plural secuelas)

  1. consequence, result
  2. aftereffect/after-effect, effect
  3. (medicine) sequela (disease or condition which is caused by an earlier disease or problem)
    • 2021 January 17, Oriol Güell, Jessica Mouzo, “Covid persistente: las secuelas que no se van”, in El País[1], retrieved 2021-01-18:
      En cualquier caso, el goteo de pacientes poscovid sobre el sistema sanitario se augura incesante. Los que sufren secuelas físicas, como fibrosis pulmonar, ictus o trombosis, “pueden presentar los cuadros más graves, pero es poco probable que sean una avalancha”, defiende Julio Mayol, director médico del Hospital Clínico de Madrid.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
  4. (narratology) sequel (a narrative that is written after another narrative set in the same universe, especially a narrative that is chronologically set after its predecessors, or (perhaps improper usage) any narrative that has a preceding narrative of its own)
    Antonym: precuela

Further reading[edit]

Anagrams[edit]