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trozos

Trozos is a Spanish noun in the plural form of trozo, meaning a piece, fragment, or chunk that is part of a larger whole. A trozo refers to a portion that has been separated or detached, and trozos catalogs several such parts. The term originates in Spanish and has cognates in other Romance languages, reflecting a common semantic core across the family.

In everyday use, trozos appears across many contexts. In food, it denotes pieces of ingredients, such as

Related forms include trocear, a verb meaning to cut into pieces; troceado, the adjective or participle meaning

trozos
de
pan
(pieces
of
bread)
or
trozos
de
fruta.
In
material
contexts,
it
can
refer
to
fragments
of
wood,
metal,
cloth,
or
other
substances,
for
example
trozos
de
madera.
Metaphorically,
trozos
can
describe
segments
of
a
narrative,
history,
or
memory,
as
in
trozos
de
historia.
The
expression
a
trozos
conveys
doing
something
in
pieces
or
in
parts,
as
in
escribir
a
trozos
(to
write
in
fragments)
or
armar
un
rompecabezas
a
trozos
(to
assemble
a
puzzle
piece
by
piece).
chopped
into
pieces.
The
term
is
broadly
neutral
and
versatile,
widely
used
in
everyday
Spanish
to
indicate
partial
portions
or
fragments
of
tangible
objects,
text,
time,
or
experiences.