plomo

Etymology
From, either taken as an early semi-learned term (Latin pl- normally becomes ll- in inherited Spanish), or alternatively, possibly borrowed from medieval Catalan (see ) or Aragonese, or even Mozarabic (as most of the lead in Spain came from Almería in Andalusia), although the latter seems unlikely as the Mozarabic result should be ; it is also not impossible that a conservative pronunciation was maintained among the upper classes. The Latin term is related to 🇨🇬, possibly from. See also 🇨🇬, which was inherited and underwent the regular sound change, and, which is semi-learned. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) lead heavy, pliable, inelastic metal
 * 2) grey colour between white and black
 * 3) shot, pellet
 * 4) plumb line
 * 5) fuse
 * 6)  bore, drag something boring or dull