Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Dulce Amargo focuses on five couples and their daily struggles.
Among the desserts we may find the sponge cake, the blancmange and the amargo.
"Azucar Amargo"
"Azúcar Amargo"
Dialogo del Amargo.
W Map Amargo offers Friday and Saturday night gigs.
"Amargo Y Dulce"
"Azucar Amargo", the CD's first single, stayed in the Billboard chart for more than 30 weeks.
Mate Amargo, a fortnightly magazine published by a former leftist guerrilla group, the Tupamaros, has an estimated readership of 53,000.
Arrabal amargo (tango)
Christopher Renshaw directed and Rafael Amargo choreographed.
The Amargosa River, which flows through nearby Beatty, gets its name from the Spanish word for "bitter", amargo.
"The Senorita del Rio Amargo."
Mr. Amargo was trained in flamenco by Mariquilla and Maite Galán.
Mr. Amargo, a Spanish flamenco dancer and actor, has described the ambitious show as a flamenco musical.
The name of the river comes from the Spanish word, amargo, for "bitter", probably shortened from agua amargosa, "bitter water".
The Sal Amargo River is a river of Paraíba state in northeastern Brazil.
Music video by Fey performing Azucar Amargo (VIdeo).
Manzano Amargo is a village and municipality in Neuquén Province in southwestern Argentina.
Dulce Amargo is a contemporary love story, full of suspense and excitement, in which the fall in love, as in real life, can be bitter sweet.
She returned to her native country of Venezuela to star as the main protagonist in the telenovela Dulce Amargo after 12 years of working abroad.
Directed by Christopher Renshaw, Zorro features the choreography of flamenco dancer Rafael Amargo.
"Azúcar Amargo" (Bitter sugar) is a Latin pop song sung by Mexican singer Fey.
(Note: Due to Rafael Amargo's absence, the eliminated votes for Spain were from Latin Lover).
The Tupamaros publish a lively weekly newspaper called Mate Amargo, named after the spicy herbal drink Uruguayans like to share from a silver straw.
Amargo, Bitter-Ash, Bitter Wood, Bitterwood, Cuasia, Jamaican Quassia, Palo de Cuasia, Pao Tariri, Picrasma, Picrasma excelsa, Quassia amara, Quassia Bark, Ruda, Surinam Quassia, Surinam Wood.
One of his remedies was a bitter tea that he used to treat infections by intestinal parasites, this concoction was based on the plant Quassia amara which Carolus Linnaeus named after him, as the discoverer of its medicinal properties.
Its size is disputed; some botanists treat it as consisting of only one species, 'Quassia amara' from tropical South America, while others treat it in a wide circumscription as a pantropical genus containing up to 40 species of trees and shrubs.