tieso

Etymology
, attested from the 1300s (in the Sumas de historia troyana, and later the Rimado de Palacio), inherited from. Compare the borrowed doublet. Coromines & Pascual have Cristóbal de las Casas's Vocabulario de las lenguas española y toscana (1570) as their first known attestation with the diphthong -ie-, a development perhaps influenced by the conjugation, of.

Adjective

 * 1) stiff, rigid
 * 2) starched, very formal
 * 3) strong-willed, stubborn
 * 4)  frozen solid, rigid due to cold
 * 5)  erect, hard, stiff having an erect penis; translates in some contexts to erection, boner, stiffy
 * 6)  dead
 * 7)  in shock, astonished
 * 8)  broke, skint without money
 * 1)  erect, hard, stiff having an erect penis; translates in some contexts to erection, boner, stiffy
 * 2)  dead
 * 3)  in shock, astonished
 * 4)  broke, skint without money
 * 1)  in shock, astonished
 * 2)  broke, skint without money
 * 1)  in shock, astonished
 * 2)  broke, skint without money
 * 1)  broke, skint without money

Noun

 * 1) A snake eel