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Word of the Day

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Intercasa
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Post by CanuckBob Tue Nov 22, 2011 7:21 am

el odio oh'-dyoh (noun)
hate, hatred

EXAMPLES
1. El odio causa conflictos.
Hate stirs up strife.

2. Con el amor el corazón puede florecer, pero el odio lo convierte en una piedra.
With love the heart can flourish, but hate turns it to stone.

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Post by Solovino Tue Nov 22, 2011 7:55 am

CanuckBob wrote:el odio oh'-dyoh (noun)
hate, hatred

EXAMPLES
1. El odio causa conflictos.
Hate stirs up strife.

2. Con el amor el corazón puede florecer, pero el odio lo convierte en una piedra.
With love the heart can flourish, but hate turns it to stone.

EXAMPLE:

1. El odio jarocho. El odio mas rencoroso.

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Post by raqueteer Tue Nov 22, 2011 9:39 am

Solovino wrote:
CanuckBob wrote:el odio oh'-dyoh (noun)
hate, hatred

EXAMPLES
1. El odio causa conflictos.
Hate stirs up strife.

2. Con el amor el corazón puede florecer, pero el odio lo convierte en una piedra.
With love the heart can flourish, but hate turns it to stone.

EXAMPLE:

1. El odio jarocho. El odio mas rencoroso.


Can you explain el odio jarocho? Not familiar with that term. Did you mean by that el odio mas rencoroso?

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Post by ferret Tue Nov 22, 2011 12:07 pm

I had to look up both adjectives in my big honkin' dictionary. I'd never heard either one before.

Jarocho/a....boorish, brusque, rude, uncouth

Rencoroso/a...rancorous, spiteful
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Post by raqueteer Tue Nov 22, 2011 12:41 pm

ferret wrote:I had to look up both adjectives in my big honkin' dictionary. I'd never heard either one before.

Jarocho/a....boorish, brusque, rude, uncouth

Rencoroso/a...rancorous, spiteful

One easy way of recognizing a word is through english/spanish cognates.

e.g. Famous/famoso
Curious/curioso
Fabulous/fabuloso

Then there are adjectives using Spanish words which we need to learn such as chisme, chiste, mentira.

Chisme, noun, is the gossip of the day. The adjective is chismoso/a depending on who the gossiper is.
Chiste, noun, is something funny or humourous. The adjective is chistoso/a depending on whether the humourist is male or female.
Mentira, noun, is a lie. The adjective for a person who lies on a repeated basis is mentiroso/a. Male or female.

Surprisingly this works quite frequently, and is a useful trick to have up your sleeve.

Hope this helps.

Cheers,
raq

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Post by SnowDaddy Tue Nov 22, 2011 1:30 pm

"Donde el infierno soy yo"

Where the hell am I?
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Post by Solovino Tue Nov 22, 2011 1:46 pm

ferret wrote:I had to look up both adjectives in my big honkin' dictionary. I'd never heard either one before.

Jarocho/a....boorish, brusque, rude, uncouth

Rencoroso/a...rancorous, spiteful

Jarocho is the word used to describe people/things from Veracruz. Like tapatío for people/things from Guadalajara.

Example:

The people are called jarochos

El son jarocho is the style of music typical to Veracruz. It uses the harp which is called el arpa jarocha.

El odio jarocho is supposedly a more more rancorous or deeper hatred and use of the term is very common, whether in jest or in serious connotation.

Te odio con odio jarocho! leaves no doubt that the other person hates your guts!

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Post by raqueteer Tue Nov 22, 2011 2:04 pm

Thanks Solo, I will use that one this week for sure.

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Post by ferret Tue Nov 22, 2011 9:13 pm

Never heard them before and don't ever intend to use them...not in English and not in Spanish.
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Post by Solovino Tue Nov 22, 2011 9:33 pm

ferret wrote:Never heard them before and don't ever intend to use them...not in English and not in Spanish.

Lighten up ferret, the term was made popular by a comedian who did a character of a rat from Veracruz named "Crispin".Word of the Day - Page 2 El-raton-crispin-o-ay-guey

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Post by CanuckBob Wed Nov 23, 2011 7:22 am

valioso vah-lyoh'-soh (adjective)
valuable, worthy

EXAMPLES
1. Las personas que se ofrecen como voluntarias para labores humanitarias son valiosas para la raza humana.
People who volunteer their services to humanity are valuable members of the human race.

2. Para mí, lo más valioso son mis hijos.
For me my children are most precious.
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Post by Solovino Wed Nov 23, 2011 8:01 am

CanuckBob wrote:valioso vah-lyoh'-soh (adjective)
valuable, worthy

EXAMPLES
1. Las personas que se ofrecen como voluntarias para labores humanitarias son valiosas para la raza humana.
People who volunteer their services to humanity are valuable members of the human race.

2. Para mí, lo más valioso son mis hijos.
For me my children are most precious.

From the verb valer: to be worth something.

EXAMPLE

No vale la pena.
It's not worth the bother.

Este carro vale mucho dinero.
This car is worth a lot of money.

Me vale.
I don't care or it's worth nothing to me.

There are some slang terms commonly heard using the last example but I am afraid they may offend the sensitive.

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Post by viajero Wed Nov 23, 2011 10:10 am

Dar lata=to be a nuisance
example
Solovino solo vino a dar lata.

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Post by CanuckBob Wed Nov 23, 2011 6:09 pm

Hey Solo, I noticed what I posted they have it pronounced vah-lyoh'-soh but with Mexican spanish shouldn't it be bah-lyoh-soh
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Post by Solovino Wed Nov 23, 2011 6:37 pm

CanuckBob wrote:Hey Solo, I noticed what I posted they have it pronounced vah-lyoh'-soh but with Mexican spanish shouldn't it be bah-lyoh-soh

It isn't necessarily Mexican Spanish, the v in Spanish is pronounced like a soft b, not like the b in your name and not like the English v either.

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Post by raqueteer Wed Nov 23, 2011 9:12 pm

Mi palabra del dia es phantasmas. Ghosts. Sorry no accents on this computer.

Muy feliz dia de gracias a todos.

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Post by ferret Wed Nov 23, 2011 9:24 pm

Solovino wrote:
CanuckBob wrote:Hey Solo, I noticed what I posted they have it pronounced vah-lyoh'-soh but with Mexican spanish shouldn't it be bah-lyoh-soh

It isn't necessarily Mexican Spanish, the v in Spanish is pronounced like a soft b, not like the b in your name and not like the English v either.

Can anyone explain this b/v situation? "Hace la lluvia" (the v is pronounced like a b in English) but "Esta lloviendo" (the v is pronounced like a v in English)

I've heard both expressions used and I understand they both mean "it's raining" (although the first is more literally translated as "it makes rain").

Estoy confundido!!!
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Post by Solovino Wed Nov 23, 2011 9:43 pm

raqueteer wrote:Mi palabra del dia es phantasmas. Ghosts. Sorry no accents on this computer.

Muy feliz dia de gracias a todos.

phantasmas?

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Post by Solovino Wed Nov 23, 2011 10:07 pm

ferret wrote:
Solovino wrote:
CanuckBob wrote:Hey Solo, I noticed what I posted they have it pronounced vah-lyoh'-soh but with Mexican spanish shouldn't it be bah-lyoh-soh

It isn't necessarily Mexican Spanish, the v in Spanish is pronounced like a soft b, not like the b in your name and not like the English v either.

Can anyone explain this b/v situation? "Hace la lluvia" (the v is pronounced like a b in English) but "Esta lloviendo" (the v is pronounced like a v in English)

I've heard both expressions used and I understand they both mean "it's raining" (although the first is more literally translated as "it makes rain").

Estoy confundido!!!

Que sepa yo se pronuncian igual. Y cuando les pregunté a mi esposa e hija, dijeron lo mismo.

Es "hace la lluvia" o "hace lluvia"? Hace sol, hace calor, hace frío, hace viento, etc..

De todos modos "esta lloviendo" es mucho mas común.

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Post by ferret Wed Nov 23, 2011 11:15 pm

So, if they are pronounced the same...does that mean with the v in Spanish pronounced as a v or a b in English?

These kinds of questions emerge because I'm usually speaking with Spanish speakers who don't have a lot of education and do not tend to enunciate their words well. The same thing happens in English and is not meant as a put down to anyone...it's just an unfortunate observation.
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Post by raqueteer Wed Nov 23, 2011 11:36 pm

Solovino wrote:
raqueteer wrote:Mi palabra del dia es phantasmas. Ghosts. Sorry no accents on this computer.

Muy feliz dia de gracias a todos.

phantasmas?


Ooop's fantasmas. Busted for bad spelling skills in Spanish.

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Post by CanuckBob Thu Nov 24, 2011 7:26 am

agudo ah-goo'-doh (adjective)
acute, keen, sharp, high-pitched

EXAMPLES
1. Casi todos celebran el Dia De Acción de Gracias en los Estados Unidos, excepto el pavo, que más bien sufre agudo malestar.
Almost everybody celebrates Thanksgiving in the United States, except for the turkey who suffers from acute uneasiness.

2. Después de comer tanto pavo, tengo un agudo dolor de estómago.
After eating too much turkey, I have an acute stomach ache.
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Post by raqueteer Fri Nov 25, 2011 6:01 pm

Just to keep all the Spanish words together here.

Word One: Pendeja a female a$$hole.

Cabrona:Use your imagination.

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Post by Solovino Fri Nov 25, 2011 6:12 pm

raqueteer wrote:Just to keep all the Spanish words together here.

Word One: Pendeja a female a$$hole.

Cabrona:Use your imagination.

I know who and what you are getting at but pendeja really doesn't fit the particular situation. Although she is stupid or "una pendeja" as you say, in this case I'd say:

Susan es una mierda.

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Post by CanuckBob Fri Nov 25, 2011 6:41 pm

Would that be mierda grande Solo?
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Post by viajero Fri Nov 25, 2011 7:00 pm

Solovino wrote:
raqueteer wrote:Just to keep all the Spanish words together here.

Word One: Pendeja a female a$$hole.

Cabrona:Use your imagination.

I know who and what you are getting at but pendeja really doesn't fit the particular situation. Although she is stupid or "una pendeja" as you say, in this case I'd say:

Susan es una mierda.
You have a point, the pendejas might be offended being compared to susan.btw I think I saw her the other night when I drove by Parque Morelos.

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