ingle
n.
fire burning in a fireplace; hearth, fireplace (British usage)
Ingles
This article is about an American supermarket chain. For a town in
Gran Canaria, see
Playa del Inglés.Ingles (
NYSE:
IMKTA) is a regional
supermarket chain based in
Asheville, North Carolina, where Robert "Bob" Ingle opened the first store in Asheville, NC in the year of
1963. His father, Elmer Ingle opened his first store in March 22,
1922. Ingles has stores in
Alabama,
Georgia,
North Carolina,
South Carolina,
Tennessee, and
Virginia. All of Ingles stores are located within 250 miles of its 780,000 square foot warehouse located in
Black Mountain, North Carolina.
See more at Wikipedia.org...
English language
inglés
adj.
English, of England
inglés (m)
n.
Englishman, man who is a citizen of England; English, resident of England; English language
ingle (m)
n.
crotch, groin, area where the thigh joins the abdomen (Anatomy)
inglês
adj.
britisher, resident of Great Britain; English, English language; Englishman, man who is a citizen of England
inglês (m)
n.
britisher, resident of Great Britain; English, English language; Englishman, man who is a citizen of England
inglés
= Englishman [Englishmen, -pl.], English.
Ex: The great practical education of the Englishman is derived from incessant intercourse between man and man, in trade.
Ex: In plain English, it means we don't have enough students and expenses must be cut.
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* canadiense de habla inglesa = English-Canadian.
* cerveza inglesa = ale.
* comillas inglesas (") = inverted commas (").
* inglés "comercial" = pidgin English.
* inglés básico = everyday functional English.
* inglés hablado por los negros = Ebonics.
* llave inglesa = wrench.
* mujer con un cutis de porcelana típico inglés = an English rose.
* mundo de habla inglesa, el = English-speaking world, the.
* no en inglés = non-English.
* país cuya lengua oficial no es el inglés = non-English-speaking country.
* TOEFL (Examen de Inglés como Segunda Lengua) = TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language).
ingle
= groin.
Ex: Despite the vitality of some poems, however, the reiterative imagery and the repeated return to the sites of ear, armpit, and groin contributes to a uniformity that can become wearying.