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Venezuela

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Chamo
Bandera de Venezuela
Perol
Bandera de Venezuela
Capar clase
Bandera de Venezuela

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ExpressionUserVotes
BocheA public scolding, a dressing-down or embarrassing rebuke in front of others. In Venezuela and the Dominican Republic getting a boche means being called out loud and clear.
alanlucena
0
PabellónVenezuela's national dish: rice, black beans (caraotas), shredded beef, and sweet plantain slices. Pabellón isn't just food — it's identity on a plate. Every Venezuelan abroad feels its absence, and every homecoming starts with ordering one.
alanlucena
0
CaraotasBlack beans, the cornerstone ingredient of Venezuelan cooking. Without caraotas there's no pabellón, and without pabellón there's no national cuisine. They're seasoned with papelón (raw cane sugar) and cooked slow until creamy and irresistible.
alanlucena
0
CanillaA very skinny person, especially one with stick-thin legs. In Venezuela and Colombia, 'canilla' is a vivid, slightly teasing way to describe someone with a lean build — the image is of a leg that looks like a little rod. Often said with affection.
alanlucena
0
PerolAn old, beat-up car that's barely holding together. In Venezuela and Colombia, 'perol' is used with affectionate mockery — it's the car that miraculously still starts, leaks oil, and sounds like it's arguing with the road, but somehow always gets you there.
alanlucena
0
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Bandera de Venezuela

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All expressions

Boche0 votes

A public scolding, a dressing-down or embarrassing rebuke in front of others. In Venezuela and the Dominican Republic getting a boche means being called out loud and clear.

alanlucena
Pabellón0 votes

Venezuela's national dish: rice, black beans (caraotas), shredded beef, and sweet plantain slices. Pabellón isn't just food — it's identity on a plate. Every Venezuelan abroad feels its absence, and every homecoming starts with ordering one.

alanlucena
Caraotas0 votes

Black beans, the cornerstone ingredient of Venezuelan cooking. Without caraotas there's no pabellón, and without pabellón there's no national cuisine. They're seasoned with papelón (raw cane sugar) and cooked slow until creamy and irresistible.

alanlucena
Canilla0 votes

A very skinny person, especially one with stick-thin legs. In Venezuela and Colombia, 'canilla' is a vivid, slightly teasing way to describe someone with a lean build — the image is of a leg that looks like a little rod. Often said with affection.

alanlucena
Perol0 votes

An old, beat-up car that's barely holding together. In Venezuela and Colombia, 'perol' is used with affectionate mockery — it's the car that miraculously still starts, leaks oil, and sounds like it's arguing with the road, but somehow always gets you there.

alanlucena
179 / 196

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