Bandera de República Dominicana

Dominican Republic

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Dique0 votes

In the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico, "supposedly" or "allegedly," used to flag that information is secondhand or that you are not fully buying it. Comes from "dizque" compressed in fast speech. Almost impossible to avoid in a Dominican conversation.

nuev
Estar aplatanado0 votes

Lazy, low-energy, with no motivation to do anything. Also describes someone who has gotten so comfortable in a place or situation that they have zero desire to change or move. Common in the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, and Spain.

netavox1
Ir como pollo sin cabeza0 votes

To run around like a headless chicken, frantic, disorganized, with no idea what to do or where to go. The perfect image of chaos without direction.

netavox1
Echarse un palo0 votes

In the Caribbean and Venezuela, to have a shot or a drink of liquor, usually something strong taken quickly and decisively. The first drink of the night or the one that loosens everything up.

ItsMar
Ser pan comido0 votes

Something that is extremely easy to do, presenting no real challenge whatsoever. It is the kind of task you can handle with your eyes closed, the one you finish before others even start, and it does not even feel worth celebrating.

nuev
Hacer la vista larga0 votes

In the Dominican Republic, to deliberately look the other way when you see something you should address. The Caribbean version of turning a blind eye, often used when someone in authority chooses to ignore a rule violation, whether to avoid conflict or protect someone.

netavox1
Hacer el avión0 votes

In the Caribbean and Mexico, to set someone up, trick them by leading them into a situation that turns against them. The perfect setup, lured in and then caught.

netavox1
Concón0 votes

The toasted, crispy rice at the bottom of the pot in Dominican Spanish, the culinary prize family members fight over at mealtime. Concón isn't a cooking mistake: it's a delicacy deliberately sought, scraped from the pot with a spoon and mixed with any dish. Asking for extra is a sign you're family or that grandma likes you especially.

nuev
Nena0 votes

An affectionate term for girls, young women, or a romantic partner across the Spanish Caribbean. "Mi nena" can be your daughter, niece, girlfriend, or best friend: the warmth is in the tone. In Puerto Rico it is so common that teachers use it for young students.

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Soltarse el pelo0 votes

To let loose and have fun without any inhibitions or worry about what others think. When someone "sueltas el pelo," the overthinking stops and the good time begins.

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Hacer las paces0 votes

To make amends with someone after a conflict or disagreement, and to restore a relationship.

nuev
Tener la cabeza dura0 votes

To be hardheaded, stubborn, slow to understand, or unable to learn from mistakes. Someone with a hard head repeats the same error a thousand times and still won't change.

netavox1
Brinca charcos0 votes

In the Dominican Republic, cheap and worn-out sneakers thrown on for everyday errands without caring about appearance. The pair you grab when you just need to run to the corner store.

nuev