Desperado Latin

Desperado Latin




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Desperado Latin
https://www.etymonline.com/word/desperado
Etymology of desperado by etymonline
Harper, D. (n.d.). Etymology of desperado. Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved October 14, 2022, from https://www.etymonline.com/word/desperado
Harper Douglas, “Etymology of desperado,” Online Etymology Dictionary, accessed October 14, 2022, https://www.etymonline.com/word/desperado.
Harper, Douglas. “Etymology of desperado.” Online Etymology Dictionary, https://www.etymonline.com/word/desperado. Accessed 14 October, 2022.
D. Harper. “Etymology of desperado.” Online Etymology Dictionary. https://www.etymonline.com/word/desperado (accessed October 14, 2022).
Definitions of desperado from WordNet
a bold outlaw (especially on the American frontier) ;
Etymologies are not definitions. From wordnet.princeton.edu, not affiliated with etymonline.
c. 1600, "a person in despair;" 1640s, "a desperate or reckless man;" mock-Spanish version of desperate (n.) "reckless criminal" (1560s), from Latin desperatus "given up, despaired of," past participle of desperare (see despair (v.)). There was an adjective desperado in Old Spanish, meaning "out of hope, desperate," but apparently it never was used as a noun and it probably has nothing to do with the English word.
"to lose hope, be without hope," mid-14c., despeiren , from Old French despeir- , stressed stem of desperer "be dismayed, lose hope, despair," from Latin desperare "to despair, to lose all hope," from de "without" (see de- ) + sperare "to hope," from spes "hope" (from PIE root *spes- "prosperity;" see speed (n.)). Related: Despaired ; despairing ; despairingly .
word-forming element denoting an action or product of an action, via French, Spanish, or Italian, ultimately from Latin -ata , fem. past-participle ending used in forming nouns. The usual form in French is -ée . The parallel form, -ade , came into French about the 13c. via southern Romanic languages (Spanish, Portuguese, and Provençal -ada , Italian -ata ), hence grenade , crusade , ballad , arcade , comrade , balustrade , lemonade , etc.
Latin -atus , past-participle suffix of verbs of the 1st conjugation, also became -ade in French (Spanish -ado , Italian -ato ) and came to be used as a suffix denoting persons or groups participating in an action (such as brigade , desperado ).
in commando , desperado , tornado , and other words of Spanish and Portuguese origin, "person or group participating in an action," ultimately from Latin -atus , past-participle suffix of verbs of the first conjugation (see -ade ).

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The ASL fingerspelling provided here is most commonly used for proper names of people and places; it is also used in some languages for concepts for which no sign is available at that moment. There are obviously specific signs for many words available in sign language that are more appropriate for daily usage.

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© 2001-2022 STANDS4 LLC. All rights reserved.
a bold outlaw (especially on the American frontier)
A bold outlaw, especially one from southern portions of the Wild West.
Etymology: From desesperado, past participle of desesperar, from disperare, from prefix dis- + sperare.
a reckless, furious man; a person urged by furious passions, and regardless of consequence; a wild ruffian
Etymology: [OSp. desperado, p. p. of desperar, fr. L. desperare. See Desperate.]
"Desperado" is a soft rock song by the Eagles, an American rock band, written by group members Glenn Frey and Don Henley. It first appeared on the 1973 album Desperado, and has later appeared on numerous compilation albums although it was not a single. The song "Desperado" was ranked #494 on Rolling Stone's 2004 list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".
Don Henley began writing parts of this in the late '60s, but it wasn't arranged into a song until his songwriting teammate Glenn Frey came along. It was the first of many songs Henley and Frey wrote together. Henley explained in the liner notes for The Very Best of the Eagles: "Glenn came over to write one day, and I showed him this unfinished tune that I had been holding for so many years. I said, 'When I play it and sing it, I think of Ray Charles - Ray Charles and Stephen Foster. It's really a Southern gothic thing, but we can easily make it more Western.' Glenn leapt right on it - filled in the blanks and brought structure. And that was the beginning of our songwriting partnership - that's when we became a team."

William Ruhlmann of Allmusic described the song as one of the band's best, saying that it showed the strength of Henley's and Frey's co-writing but also called it a "painfully slow ballad."
des-pėr-ā′dō, n. a desperate fellow: one reckless of danger: a madman:— pl. Desperā′dos . [Sp. desesperado —L. desperātus .]
Song lyrics by desperado -- Explore a large variety of song lyrics performed by desperado on the Lyrics.com website.
The numerical value of desperado in Chaldean Numerology is: 3
The numerical value of desperado in Pythagorean Numerology is: 6
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"desperado." Definitions.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2022. Web. 14 Oct. 2022. < https://www.definitions.net/definition/desperado >.



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Desperados: Latin Druglords, U.S. Lawmen, and the War America Can't Win Hardcover – October 18, 1988
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4.7 out of 5 stars

29 ratings



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Traces the exploits of United States narcotics agents and the shadowy secret world of drug traffickers, exposing the discrepancy between government policy and practice
In the course of covering the international drug scene for 10 years for Newsweek (she is now with Time ) Shannon clearly developed an encyclopedic knowledge of the subject. Here she draws on that expertise, basing her book on the torture-murder of Drug Enforcement Administration agent Enrique Camarena in Guadalajara, Mexico, in 1985, a case that is still unresolved. She reveals that the U.S. government has talked a good anti-drug fight but has done little more than form study commissions, convene conferences and sign treaties. She contends, also, that Mexico's war on drugs has been rife with corruption, from street cops to high officials. And, farther south, the Colombian administration has been fighting a losing battle against a cartel headquartered in Medellin, with judges and lawmen assassinated by the dozen. The conclusion: the only way to win the war is to end the demand in America for marijuana and cocaine. An instructive study. 35,000 first printing; $50,000 ad/promo; first serial to Time magazine; film rights to Michael Mann Productions; author tour. Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
The "desperados" of the title in this excellent work refer, not to drug dealers, but to agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), fighting the war on drugs throughout Latin America. News magazine veteran Shannon focuses on the DEA war in Mexico, before and after the murder of agent Kiki Camerena by drug lords. She also details the role of the U.S. government, which stresses positive moves and ignores negative ones when dealing with drug-producing countries. An incisive and gripping account, and a good companion to Paul Eddy's The Cocaine Wars: Murder, Money, Corruption, and the World's Most Valuable Commodity ( LJ 7/88). Very highly recommended. Sally G. Waters, Stetson Law Lib., St. Petersburg, Fla. Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Publisher

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Viking (October 18, 1988) Language

:

English Hardcover

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528 pages ISBN-10

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0670810266 ISBN-13

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978-0670810260 Item Weight

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2 pounds Dimensions

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1 x 1 x 1 inches


4.7 out of 5 stars

29 ratings



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This is a great book on the drug war in Mexico through the early '90's, from a US perspective. Very readable and informative.












Great to find out what happened after all these years. No newspaper ever covered with such depth this sad story i would recommend to anyone interested in the subject












Very, very powerful reading, and a necessary primer for understanding both the drug cartels and the U.S.-Mexico relationship. Well written expose. Also a sad and typical tale of bureaucratis inertia and politics against the diligent and professional efforts of those who serve on the front lines.












GREAT INFORMATION, GOOD BOOK BUT AT TIMES IS HARD TO FOLLOW.












Found it very informative,riveting and frustrating with the all the suspected corruption.


5.0 out of 5 stars









exceeded expectations












Anyone interested in the history of the drug cartels in Mexico needs to research the murder of Enricque (Kiki) Camarena a DEA agent stationed in Guadalahara. This book examines this episode in Mexican history and provides the reader with all the details but in a very entertaining way.


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Elaine Shannon, best-selling author of Hunting LeRoux, tells the exclusive story of transnational organized crime’s premier innovator, Paul Calder LeRoux, a twisted genius who created the world’s biggest Internet pharmacy, with $300 million in sales during its initial years, then diversified into arms, hard drugs, and murder. She uses her unparalleled sources and access to closely held documents to tell the riveting story of a tech titan who broke bad and did high-dollar deals with Iran, North Korea, the Chinese Triads, Somali pirates, Serb mafia, Colombian cartels, Islamist terrorists in the Philippines and mercenaries of many nations. AP calls the book :a gripping true-crime tale that is both unbelievable while yet being realistic. Investigative journalist Shannon takes the reader beyond the fly-on-the-wall and puts them right into the heart of every action and situation." Publishers Weekly awards the book a coveted red star and says that through Shannon's telling, LeRoux "emerges as perhaps the most significant contemporary criminal not known to the general public for his having 'introduced the principles of twenty-first century entrepreneurship to the dark side of the global economy'.”

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