Military transport vehicle.
1Give us a duro and we won't say a word.
2Very like Pentelic marble, but easily distinguishable, is the Marmor Porinum, the Marmo Grechetto duro of the Italians.
3A duro is a five-peseta coin.
4The deficiency was remedied by the soldier who was in charge of me for the consideration of a duro.
6The lady petted the little boy; then she took a duro from her purse and gave it to the gipsy.
7I asked a guard to get me some pens, ink, and paper, and gave him a duro for the purpose.
8The gipsy, parting her lips in amazement and bursting forth into profuse flattery, exhibited the duro to everybody in the place.
9The sensible shoe is back (Hallelujah) Not one but two models wearing gowns from London knitwear duro Sibling trip
10The rustic wagered another duro and lost; he glanced anxiously at his fellow countrymen, extracted another duro and lost that, too.
11The day after the triumph, the month of imprisonment will be taken into account, and St. Pelagie is not the 'carcere duro'.
12The New Yorker, July 14, 2003 P. 56 For a duro you got a night out of the wind.
13My wretched fellow was condemned to lose his head, and afterwards to be burnt, while I was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment 'in carcere duro'.
14In the month of June, Cæsar and Amparito went to Castro Duro.
15Afterwards he went down to Cidones again and returned to Castro Duro.
16A time for new elections arrived, and Cæsar stood for Castro Duro.