Definition of Hidalga

1. a gentlewoman [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Hidalga

hickory tree
hicks
hickster
hickup
hickuped
hickuping
hickups
hickwall
hickwalls
hickway
hickways
hid
hidable
hidage
hidages
hidalga (current term)
hidalgas
hidalgo
hidalgoes
hidalgoite
hidalgos
hidate
hidation
hidato
hidatos
hidden
hidden agenda
hidden agendas
hidden camera
hidden in plain sight

Literary usage of Hidalga

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Mexican Guide by Thomas Allibone Janvier (1898)
"The interior has been completely transformed, and the existing facade is a recent construction of the architect Ig- nacio hidalga. It is very rarely that ..."

2. Letters From An English Traveller In Spain, in 1778, On The Origin and by John Talbot Dillon (1781)
"The daughter of an Hidalgo enjoys every privilege of her birth, though married to a commoner, and a woman who is not an hidalga, enjoys all theie privileges ..."

3. An Almanack for the Year of Our Lord by Joseph Whitaker (1869)
"... 43°, is that of hidalga This et bas abo the longest period, 14 years, and eis out as far as Saturn's orbit. On the other il karus. discovered In 1040, ..."

4. The Races of Europe: A Sociological Study by William Zebina Ripley (1899)
"... and from all foreign militan- sen-ice: and in virtue of this liberty they were accorded throughout Spain the rank and privileges of hidalga or noblemen. ..."

5. The Congressional Globe by United States Congress, Francis Preston Blair, John Cook Rives, George A. Bailey, Franklin Rives (1853)
""•For tunning and marking the boundary line between the United Slates and Mexico, under the treaty of Guadalupe hidalga, one hundred mid twenty thousand ..."

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