What does lombada in Portuguese mean?

What is the meaning of the word lombada in Portuguese? The article explains the full meaning, pronunciation along with bilingual examples and instructions on how to use lombada in Portuguese.

The word lombada in Portuguese means range of hills, mountain range, rump; speed bump, saliência, quebra-molas, lombada. To learn more, please see the details below.

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Meaning of the word lombada

range of hills, mountain range, rump; speed bump

saliência

noun (hump, lump in a surface)

(substantivo feminino: Substantivo exclusivamente feminino. Ex. "atriz", "menina", etc. Aqui encaixam-se também os substantivos compostos compostos. Ex. "batata frita", "garrafa d'água", etc.)
A mesa é lisa, exceto pela saliência perto do canto.
The table is smooth except for the bump near the corner.

quebra-molas

noun (speed bump that slows traffic)

(substantivo masculino: Substantivo exclusivamente masculino. Ex. "ator", "menino", etc. Aqui encaixam-se também os substantivos compostos compostos. Ex. "carrinho de mão", "guarda-chuva", etc.)
There are a lot of road humps along this street.

lombada

noun (book: bound edge)

(substantivo feminino: Substantivo exclusivamente feminino. Ex. "atriz", "menina", etc. Aqui encaixam-se também os substantivos compostos compostos. Ex. "batata frita", "garrafa d'água", etc.)
Os livros estavam alinhados na prateleira com suas lombadas voltadas para fora.
The books were lined up on the shelf with their spines facing outward.

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Portuguese (português) is a Roman language native to the Iberian peninsula of Europe. It is the only official language of Portugal, Brazil, Angola, Mozambique, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde. Portuguese has between 215 and 220 million native speakers and 50 million second language speakers, for a total of about 270 million. Portuguese is often listed as the sixth most spoken language in the world, third in Europe. In 1997, a comprehensive academic study ranked Portuguese as one of the 10 most influential languages in the world. According to UNESCO statistics, Portuguese and Spanish are the fastest growing European languages after English.