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 The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread 
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Team Kris
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
quien dijo BOMBA

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Sun Jan 04, 2009 11:46 pm
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Teh Mexican
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Christian wrote:
quien dijo BOMBA


haha..

BOMBAS are just humorous verses people say in Yucatan. At the beginning of the verse they say BOMBA!


Sun Jan 04, 2009 11:53 pm
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
matatonio wrote:
Christian wrote:
quien dijo BOMBA


haha..

BOMBAS are just humorous verses people say in Yucatan. At the beginning of the verse they say BOMBA!


BOMBA

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Sun Jan 04, 2009 11:54 pm
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Teh Mexican
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Christian wrote:
matatonio wrote:
Christian wrote:
quien dijo BOMBA


haha..

BOMBAS are just humorous verses people say in Yucatan. At the beginning of the verse they say BOMBA!


BOMBA


¡BOMBA!


AYER AL SALIR DE MISA
TE VI MUY SONRIENTE,
PERO ENTRE TU SONRISA
HABÍA UN FRIJOL EN TU DIENTE.

not very funny... but yeah.. thats it


Sun Jan 04, 2009 11:56 pm
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Team Kris
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Ah.

Solamente en Yucatan?

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:00 am
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Teh Mexican
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Pues se llaman bombas yucatecas, yo creo que si pero nose.


Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:03 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Christian wrote:
Ah.

Solamente en Yucatan?



Si ... no toda la gente es tan idiota como para reirse 3 veces de esas bombas yucatecas ;)

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Last edited by Mau on Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:06 am, edited 1 time in total.



Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:05 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
I'm GaGa wrote:
Christian wrote:
Ah.

Solamente en Yucatan?



Si ... no toda la gente es tan idiota como para reirse 3 veces de esas bombas yucatecas

:funny:

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:06 am
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Teh Mexican
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
me confundi totalmente. Escribi en ingles y español.


Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:07 am
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College Boy T

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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
I'm GaGa wrote:
Jajajaja mil veces mas sexy pero el acento mexicano es mejor que el español :P

Para mi, el acento colombiano es el mejor y el acento panameno es el peor.

Acaba de pasar un semestre en Costa Rica...ahora hablo como un tico :)


Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:47 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Hahahaha, yo creia que los acaentos de sudamerica eran iguales, jaja pero creo que me equivoco, y aun asi el mejor acento es el mexicano (sin contar el deyucatan y el de los chilangos EWW!!!) :)

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:55 am
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Teh Mexican
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
A los ARgentinos los reconosco super rapido.


Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:57 am
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College Boy T

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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Los chilangos?

Ellos son como el clase "campesino"?


Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:57 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
da torri wrote:
Los chilangos?

Ellos son como el clase "campesino"?



Jajajaja noo ellos son los que viven en la cd. de MExico jajaja ellos hablan super raro jaja y donde quiera que van los reconocen por su forma de hablar :D ( y vestir, caminar, correr, gritar, etc etc)

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:58 am
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College Boy T

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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Visite la ciudad en 2004, pero no pensaba que sus acentos fueron tan groseros...


Mon Jan 05, 2009 1:10 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Jajajaja y eso es cierto son los mas groceros y tienen mal humor todo el tiempo jajaja, bueno por lo menos yo ODIO la CD. de MEXICO

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 1:11 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Esto lo explica muy bien.. pero esta algo largo hehe.

Spoiler: show
A chilango has lived in Mexico City enough time to learn third-world’s paramount and old-fashioned rule of categorizing people by their wallet’s weight, hence their desperate need to cover by all costs any display that might expose their lack of money and will desperately reach unexpected lengths that includes calling random people by derogative names just so they can appear ‘above’ in terms of class, humiliating co-workers, talking excessively loud and making up stories and intricate phrases in order to impress others. He can usually be found gossiping or spreading “facts” behind the backs of fellow co-workers as a chilango is entirely convinced everyone is on to get his position, if not belongings.

A chilango can often be heard giggling at phrases like ‘could you get some banana from the fridge?’, as their sense of humour is exclusively and proudly limited to anything that could denote sex, which can go from stupidly infantile to explicitely fun-breaking and obscene. Consequently, a chilango tends to laugh at his own jokes and last minutes at it so he can perhaps get the rest to enjoy it as much as he did. A chilango does not enjoy black, dry or too in-your-face sense of humour, especially not if it involves religious figures or god forbid, himself. A chilango will not tolerate to laugh at himself at ANY given moment.

In terms of fashion, a chilango is not your season-changing type. A female chilango will obstinately stick to mom jeans, hard-to-find 1995-inspired platforms (adult chilangos can be all the way down to 4’5 tall), loose sweaters, lots of spray and a clean face with occassional red lipstick applied with a precision only a politician’s wife can achieve in the rest of the world. Males are usually found in ill-fitted suits (regardless of the day of the week) or wearing pants above the waist and tight enough in the bum area so you can see their sheer socks below, which vary in colours that go from mustard to pink, mint or nude. Same socks he wears with above-the-knee shorts for a weekend in what he calls ‘’provincia’’ (term known as the dead giveaway for any chilango since he’s 100% convinced he’s right on the cutting edge of urbanism).

In general tastes, a conventional chilango will demonstrate an odd attraction for British top charts and its shining stars, a chilango is convinced The Charlatans, Oasis, Supergrass or similar forgotten bands are the best thing since sliced bread.
In terms of food, anything that involves recycled oil (meaning it’s been simmered for days at the taco stand) will do it for chilango’s culinary demands.
When carrying locally-adapted plates, a chilango can often be identified on the streets when he drives through pedestrians, forcibly does a red light right on a crosswalk, pulls over in bus stops and parks his car in the blue zone. A chilango will not drive considerably fast but he will make sure he’s right on your bumper as he firmly believes his ‘space’ is about to be stolen by the driver on the left. Chilangos are also known for driving obnoxious, tiny cars like chevy’s corsa, nissan tsuru and volkswagen golf.

A chilango’s dream of living (from the upper middle class to poor and average ones) is accurately portrayed via ‘telenovelas’, in which wealthy people live in absurdly large houses, get their maids to wear corny uniforms, have a driver and make sure they display a level of disdain for others that validates them as members of some mentally-created ‘elite’. Thus, your average chilango finds himself emulating characters’ behaviour or vocabulary from whatever telenovela-of-the-moment dictates as he’s aware a telenovela is considered a reputable source for a majority of Mexicans.

Although a chilango may luck out in selling the above-mentioned persona to nearby Southern naive types, a chilango is more often than not, repelled by others (except chilangos) and socially rejected in the North. Rejection he will incessantly claim to be nothing but admiration or envy, and maybe, in an usual attempt to appear honest and describe his situation, a chilango will just openly suppose that people peg him as ‘snobbish’ and ‘stuck-up’ for living in the city, when they’re ‘qualities’ that do not reasonate too well with his lack of evidence to be considered ‘modern’ in taste or manners.


Mon Jan 05, 2009 1:15 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
matatonio wrote:
Esto lo explica muy bien.. pero esta algo largo hehe.

Spoiler: show
A chilango has lived in Mexico City enough time to learn third-world’s paramount and old-fashioned rule of categorizing people by their wallet’s weight, hence their desperate need to cover by all costs any display that might expose their lack of money and will desperately reach unexpected lengths that includes calling random people by derogative names just so they can appear ‘above’ in terms of class, humiliating co-workers, talking excessively loud and making up stories and intricate phrases in order to impress others. He can usually be found gossiping or spreading “facts” behind the backs of fellow co-workers as a chilango is entirely convinced everyone is on to get his position, if not belongings.

A chilango can often be heard giggling at phrases like ‘could you get some banana from the fridge?’, as their sense of humour is exclusively and proudly limited to anything that could denote sex, which can go from stupidly infantile to explicitely fun-breaking and obscene. Consequently, a chilango tends to laugh at his own jokes and last minutes at it so he can perhaps get the rest to enjoy it as much as he did. A chilango does not enjoy black, dry or too in-your-face sense of humour, especially not if it involves religious figures or god forbid, himself. A chilango will not tolerate to laugh at himself at ANY given moment.

In terms of fashion, a chilango is not your season-changing type. A female chilango will obstinately stick to mom jeans, hard-to-find 1995-inspired platforms (adult chilangos can be all the way down to 4’5 tall), loose sweaters, lots of spray and a clean face with occassional red lipstick applied with a precision only a politician’s wife can achieve in the rest of the world. Males are usually found in ill-fitted suits (regardless of the day of the week) or wearing pants above the waist and tight enough in the bum area so you can see their sheer socks below, which vary in colours that go from mustard to pink, mint or nude. Same socks he wears with above-the-knee shorts for a weekend in what he calls ‘’provincia’’ (term known as the dead giveaway for any chilango since he’s 100% convinced he’s right on the cutting edge of urbanism).

In general tastes, a conventional chilango will demonstrate an odd attraction for British top charts and its shining stars, a chilango is convinced The Charlatans, Oasis, Supergrass or similar forgotten bands are the best thing since sliced bread.
In terms of food, anything that involves recycled oil (meaning it’s been simmered for days at the taco stand) will do it for chilango’s culinary demands.
When carrying locally-adapted plates, a chilango can often be identified on the streets when he drives through pedestrians, forcibly does a red light right on a crosswalk, pulls over in bus stops and parks his car in the blue zone. A chilango will not drive considerably fast but he will make sure he’s right on your bumper as he firmly believes his ‘space’ is about to be stolen by the driver on the left. Chilangos are also known for driving obnoxious, tiny cars like chevy’s corsa, nissan tsuru and volkswagen golf.

A chilango’s dream of living (from the upper middle class to poor and average ones) is accurately portrayed via ‘telenovelas’, in which wealthy people live in absurdly large houses, get their maids to wear corny uniforms, have a driver and make sure they display a level of disdain for others that validates them as members of some mentally-created ‘elite’. Thus, your average chilango finds himself emulating characters’ behaviour or vocabulary from whatever telenovela-of-the-moment dictates as he’s aware a telenovela is considered a reputable source for a majority of Mexicans.

Although a chilango may luck out in selling the above-mentioned persona to nearby Southern naive types, a chilango is more often than not, repelled by others (except chilangos) and socially rejected in the North. Rejection he will incessantly claim to be nothing but admiration or envy, and maybe, in an usual attempt to appear honest and describe his situation, a chilango will just openly suppose that people peg him as ‘snobbish’ and ‘stuck-up’ for living in the city, when they’re ‘qualities’ that do not reasonate too well with his lack of evidence to be considered ‘modern’ in taste or manners.



Todo lo que dice ahi es cierto :yes:

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 1:26 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
I'm GaGa wrote:
Jajajaja y eso es cierto son los mas groceros y tienen mal humor todo el tiempo jajaja, bueno por lo menos yo ODIO la CD. de MEXICO

si yo viviera en la cd. de mexico tambien pasara todo el tiempo con mal humor.

;)

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 2:42 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
jajaja bueno el ambiente de la ciudad tampoco ayuda mucho a su caracter :D

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 3:22 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Bueno, puesto que he vivido entre mucha gente latina de diferentes países, uno sí puede distinguir entre los acentos de cada país y aún de los diferentes regiones de cada país. Por ejemplo, los guatemaltecos que viven cerca de la capital hablan mayormente como los mexicanos sino que no tienen el mismito vocabulario. Los guatemaltecos que viven más en el campo mayormente hablan sus idiomas mayas (que a mí me parecía como si estuvieran hablando hebreo o algo), pero si hablan español tienen un acento bien raro y no saben muy bien las reglas de gramática.

La gente del caribe también habla diferente. Los dominicanos y boricuas hablan muy similar pero si puede distinguir. Y los cubanos tienen su acento propio.

Desde que he vivido en Puerto Rico ya hablo más como ellos y he incorporado unas palabras boricuas en mi vocabulario cotidiano.

También lo que me hace reír es que cada país cree que habla el mejor español o que su español escucha mejor que los otros.

Por lo menos esto es lo que he notado.

Un cuento un poco chistoso… hace unos años cuando llegué a Puerto Rico por la primera vez fui a mi primer día de trabajo. Mi jefa quería tener una reunión más tarde en el día para hablar sobre los proyectos míos. Al terminar la conversación ella me dijo "nos vemos a las dos." Pero, como muchos saben, no se pronuncia la 's' en Puerto Rico (pues, en todo el caribe). Yo había conocido a muchos dominicanos antes y había visitado al país varias veces, pero en ese momento se me olvidó que comen la 's'. Pues, yo escuché "no vemo al lado." Entendí la parte de nos vemos porque eso es común dondequiera que vayas, pero pensé que íbamos a reunirnos al lado del edificio donde estaba la oficina de mi jefa. Yo fui allí y esperé por un rato largo y ella no vino. Por fin regresé a su oficina y me di cuenta de mi error.

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 12:45 pm
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Floydboy wrote:
Bueno, puesto que he vivido entre mucha gente latina de diferentes países, uno sí puede distinguir entre los acentos de cada país y aún de los diferentes regiones de cada país. Por ejemplo, los guatemaltecos que viven cerca de la capital hablan mayormente como los mexicanos sino que no tienen el mismito vocabulario. Los guatemaltecos que viven más en el campo mayormente hablan sus idiomas mayas (que a mí me parecía como si estuvieran hablando hebreo o algo), pero si hablan español tienen un acento bien raro y no saben muy bien las reglas de gramática.

La gente del caribe también habla diferente. Los dominicanos y boricuas hablan muy similar pero si puede distinguir. Y los cubanos tienen su acento propio.

Desde que he vivido en Puerto Rico ya hablo más como ellos y he incorporado unas palabras boricuas en mi vocabulario cotidiano.

También lo que me hace reír es que cada país cree que habla el mejor español o que su español escucha mejor que los otros.

Por lo menos esto es lo que he notado.

Un cuento un poco chistoso… hace unos años cuando llegué a Puerto Rico por la primera vez fui a mi primer día de trabajo. Mi jefa quería tener una reunión más tarde en el día para hablar sobre los proyectos míos. Al terminar la conversación ella me dijo "nos vemos a las dos." Pero, como muchos saben, no se pronuncia la 's' en Puerto Rico (pues, en todo el caribe). Yo había conocido a muchos dominicanos antes y había visitado al país varias veces, pero en ese momento se me olvidó que comen la 's'. Pues, yo escuché "no vemo al lado." Entendí la parte de nos vemos porque eso es común dondequiera que vayas, pero pensé que íbamos a reunirnos al lado del edificio donde estaba la oficina de mi jefa. Yo fui allí y esperé por un rato largo y ella no vino. Por fin regresé a su oficina y me di cuenta de mi error.


:funny: :funny: no manches jajaja eso si cada pais tiene un acento diferente y todos tienen algo bueno el que si no me usta para nada es el acento de los españoles :D

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Mon Jan 05, 2009 2:20 pm
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ha ha, charade you are
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
¿Alguien aquí ha conocido a una persona de Guinea Ecuatorial? Pienso que tienen un acento caribeño pero la verdad es que no sé por seguro.

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Wed Jan 07, 2009 11:44 am
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
Oye, q me dicen q hubo un terremoto en Costa Rica. Espero q no haya grandes perdidas.

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Thu Jan 08, 2009 5:17 pm
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Post Re: The Spanish (Espanol) Conversation Thread
junio wrote:
Oye, q me dicen q hubo un terremoto en Costa Rica. Espero q no haya grandes perdidas.



Yo no e oido nada de eso pero apoco es cierto????

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Fri Jan 09, 2009 4:56 am
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