/ˈdjaɲo/, [ˈd̪ja.ɲʊ], /diˈaɲo/
OriginAttested since circa 1536. From Old Galician-Portuguese diabo, earlier diaboo, displacing the collateral forms diabre, diabro and diablo; from Ecclesiastical Latin, Late Latin diabolus (“devil”) (probably borrowed as a semi-learned term), itself from Ancient Greek διάβολος (diábolos, “slanderer”).
- masculinedevil; demon; fiend (creature from Hell)
- colloquial, masculine, with-definite-articleused to emphasise the extent of an action, usually one of a negative nature
- masculinean evil or perverse person
- masculinea mischievous person
- damn! (expresses anger, irritation or disappointment)
Formsdiaños(plural) · deño(alternative) · diallo(alternative) · dianllo(alternative) · diaños!(canonical)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0