Bilbaoan
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]Bilbaoan (not comparable)
- From Bilbao or otherwise related to the city of Bilbao.
- 1984, Dorothy Legarreta, The Guernica generation: Basque refugee children of the Spanish Civil War:
- Arana, the son of a major Bilbaoan shipbuilder, set out to revitalize a flagging Basque consciousness. One of his major concerns was the restoration of the Basque language, Euskera, which had fallen to the status of a local patois
- 1998, José C. Moya, Cousins and strangers: Spanish immigrants in Buenos Aires, 1850-1930
- Antonio's good grammar and mathematical skills landed him a job in the store of an old Bilbaoan friend of his uncle two blocks from the latter's residence.
Translations
[edit]from Bilbao
Noun
[edit]Bilbaoan (plural Bilbaoans)
- Someone from Bilbao
- 1989, Barbara Rosen, Arriaga the Forgotten Genius: The Short Life of a Basque Composer:
- During the French occupation, Bilbaoans were likely to have been exposed to some French culture and influence.
- 2007, William A. Douglass, Joseba Zulaika, Basque culture: anthropological perspectives:
- Only about 10 percent of Bilbaoans speak Euskara, as compared with 35 to 40 percent of the inhabitants of Donostia. Such a contradiction is at the very core of both the difficulties and the dynamism of the Basque Country.