From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishIberianI‧be‧ri‧an /aɪˈbɪəriən $ -ˈbɪr-/ adjective SANSGrelating to Spain or Portugal, or its people → Spanish the Iberian peninsula
Examples from the Corpus
Iberian• They decided to rewrite several accounting policies at Iberian.• Third, the customers themselves were familiar with Iberian.• Research suggests there are fewer than 650 Iberian lynx left in the wild.• Here I simply introduce them to you and describe how Iberian managers ran afoul of them. 1.• Think back to the story of Iberian Motors in Chapter One.• As the story illustrates, however the biases did not fit the challenge of managing performance and change at Iberian Motors.• The Roman past lay more heavily over the Iberian peninsula.Origin Iberian (1500-1600) Latin Iberia “land of the Iberes”, from Greek Iberes “Spanish people”