cacique
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish cacique, from Taino *kasike or Arawak kassequa, cazaqah (“chieftain; power”).
Noun
cacique (plural caciques)
- (historical) Originally a tribal chief in the Spanish West Indies.
- A local political leader in Latin America.
- (ornithology) Any of a number of tropical blackbirds from Central America and South America, family Icteridae.
Translations
Further reading
French
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ka.sik/
Noun
cacique m (plural caciques)
Portuguese
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish cacique, from Taino *kasike or Arawak kassequa, cazaqah (“chieftain; power”).
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: ca‧ci‧que
Noun
cacique m (plural caciques, feminine cacica, feminine plural cacicas)
Synonyms
- (chieftain): chefe
Spanish
Etymology
From Taino *kasike (“chieftain”) or Arawak kassequa (“chieftain; power”).
Noun
cacique m (plural caciques, feminine cacica, feminine plural cacicas)
- (historical) chieftain (Indian chief in a tribe)
- (by extension) powerful person, fat cat
- (ornithology) cacique (bird)
Derived terms
- cacicato
- cacicazgo
- caciquear
- caciquismo
- cacicatura
- cacical
Descendants
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