| sustantivo |
| 1. |
peer - a person who is of equal standing with another in a group |
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equal,
match,
compeer |
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individual,
mortal,
person,
somebody,
someone,
soul a single organism
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peer group contemporaries of the same status
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associate any event that usually accompanies or is closely connected with another; "first was the lightning and then its thunderous associate"
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coeval,
contemporary a person of nearly the same age as another
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gangsta (Black English) a member of a youth gang
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backup,
backup man,
fill-in,
relief,
reliever,
stand-in,
substitute (computer science) a copy of a file or directory on a separate storage device; "he made a backup in case the original was accidentally damaged or erased"
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replacement,
successor the act of furnishing an equivalent person or thing in the place of another; "replacing the star will not be easy"
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townsman a resident of a town or city
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| 2. |
peer - a nobleman (duke or marquis or earl or viscount or baron) who is a member of the British peerage |
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lord,
noble,
nobleman a titled peer of the realm
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baronage,
peerage the peers of a kingdom considered as a group
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britain,
great britain,
u.k.,
uk,
united kingdom,
united kingdom of great britain and nort an island comprising England and Scotland and Wales
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baron a very wealthy or powerful businessman; "an oil baron"
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duke a British peer of the highest rank
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earl a British peer ranking below a marquess and above a viscount
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earl marshal an officer of the English peerage who organizes royal processions and other ceremonies
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life peer a British peer whose title lapses at death
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marquess a British peer ranking below a duke and above an earl
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peer of the realm a peer who is entitled to sit in the House of Lords
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viscount a British peer who ranks below an earl and above a baron
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viscountess a noblewoman holding the rank of viscount in her own right
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| verbo |
| 1. |
peer - look searchingly; "We peered into the back of the shop to see whether a salesman was around" |
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look have a certain outward or facial expression; "How does she look?"; "The child looks unhappy"; "She looked pale after the surgery"
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