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mrbalihai
Add lucha, noir, dream sequences, and fantastic elements, and you get Sonámbulo, a comic book about of a Mexican wrestler who is beaten by mobsters and left for dead; when, decades later, he awakens, he finds that he can see the dreams of others, but cannot sleep. He leaves wrestling, but keeps his mask as he becomes a private detective.
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By the bye, I'm liking Miracle of Science (http://www.project-apollo.net/mos/mos000.html), but it's a bit slow-going. It'll go faster when I learn to stop reading the annotations at the bottom.
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And the spelling is correct, although yours is an acceptable variation, according to the Real Academia Española's dictionary (http://buscon.rae.es/diccionario/drae.htm).
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Whazzat?
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Also see ¡Mucha Lucha! (http://www2.warnerbros.com/lucha/home.html).
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Why are "lucha" and "mascaritas" female ("a")?
Right. Luchar. Doi.
Does this meaning extend to the name Lucho? I either subconsciously or inadvertently named a character in my book Lucho. He is a very bad person.
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Lucho is the nickname for Luis. However, i've never heard of a Luisa called Lucha. I have an aunt Lucha, but her name is Luz. As far as strange nicknames go, i'm not sure how Pepe comes out of José (or, analogously, Beppo from Giuseppe).
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