secuela
Galician edit
Etymology edit
Noun edit
secuela f (plural secuelas)
- consequence, result
- aftereffect/after-effect, effect
- (medicine) sequela
- (narratology) sequel (a narrative that is written after another narrative set in the same universe, especially a narrative that is chronologically set after its predecessors, or (perhaps improper usage) any narrative that has a preceding narrative of its own)
- Antonym: precuela
Further reading edit
- “secuela” in Dicionario da Real Academia Galega, Royal Galician Academy.
Spanish edit
Etymology edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
secuela f (plural secuelas)
- consequence, result
- aftereffect/after-effect, effect
- (medicine) sequela (disease or condition which is caused by an earlier disease or problem)
- 2021 January 17, Oriol Güell, Jessica Mouzo, “Covid persistente: las secuelas que no se van”, in El País[1], retrieved 2021-01-18:
- En cualquier caso, el goteo de pacientes poscovid sobre el sistema sanitario se augura incesante. Los que sufren secuelas físicas, como fibrosis pulmonar, ictus o trombosis, “pueden presentar los cuadros más graves, pero es poco probable que sean una avalancha”, defiende Julio Mayol, director médico del Hospital Clínico de Madrid.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- (narratology) sequel (a narrative that is written after another narrative set in the same universe, especially a narrative that is chronologically set after its predecessors, or (perhaps improper usage) any narrative that has a preceding narrative of its own)
- Antonym: precuela
Further reading edit
- “secuela”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014