barrio
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish Barrio.
name
- A surname from Spanish.
noun
- A municipality or subdivision of a municipality in Spanish America, and in Spain itself.
- A slum on the periphery of a major city, or a low to middle-class neighborhood in a lesser city, in Venezuela or the Dominican Republic.
- A rural barangay or neighborhood.“In the barrio, they talked excitedly about the wood-gatherer's discovery. There was so much pushing and quibbling over details that by the time the barrio had organized itself to set out for Salug to investigate, dusk had already fallen.”
- An area or neighborhood in a US city inhabited predominantly by Spanish-speakers or people of Hispanic origin.“After World War II, its prospering working-class white residents moved to other, more upscale suburban developments, and by the 1950s the area had become an isolated ethnic enclave with its own barrio gang.”