Trending
Most popular words
All expressions
Trending
All expressions
To publicly expose and shame someone on social media for their bad actions, like harassment, scams, or abuse. It is the digital version of collective justice where the internet becomes judge and jury, and a person's reputation can be destroyed in minutes. Originally from Chile, now widely used across Latin America.
Shocked, bewildered, or completely thrown off by something unexpected in Mexico and Chile. When something so surprising happens that you need a few seconds to process it, you are "sacado." It is that face of total disbelief when reality hits you out of nowhere. Often used as "sacado de onda," which adds emphasis, like saying your whole vibe got disrupted. The word literally means "taken out," as in mentally pulled out of your normal state.
A bold, tough, impressive, or troublesome person in Mexico and Spain. One of the most versatile words in Spanish, it can range from the harshest insult to the highest compliment depending on tone and context. Calling an exam 'cabrón' means it's brutally hard, but calling a businessman 'cabrón' means he's a total boss.
A huge amount of something, a whole lot, a ton of it in Spain. Used when you want to emphasize that there's an absurd quantity of something without getting into exact numbers. It works for things, people, and situations, and it's one of those uniquely Spanish words that you hear constantly on the streets of Madrid.
Drunk or under the influence of alcohol. A more formal or euphemistic way of saying someone's had too much, used especially in Peru, Colombia, and Chile when you don't want to say borracho directly.