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when something says de dos en dos or de pueblo en pueblo what does that mean

2006-11-27 15:08:27 · 4 answers · asked by chicadelsol 2 in Society & Culture Languages

4 answers

De dos en dos can mean you're only letting two people pass at a time. Two by two.

And de pueblo en pueblo means that you/or someone else never stays in the same place. Nomadic. From town to town figuratively from place to place.

2006-11-27 15:18:17 · answer #1 · answered by Luis DLC 2 · 1 0

dos en dos= two by two, pueblo en pueblo= town to town

2006-11-27 16:09:34 · answer #2 · answered by @lli3 2 · 0 0

de dos en dos = two by two
pueblo = people or village/town
So...maybe town by town or group by group? Depends on the context.

2006-11-27 15:14:44 · answer #3 · answered by AsiaWired 4 · 0 0

pair to pair,or two for two
the other;
from town to town

2006-11-27 16:51:56 · answer #4 · answered by Byzantino 7 · 1 0

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