Your word isn't here yet
Join Hablaaa and add the expression no one else has documented.
Create account/Sounds like "foo" (as in "food") + "MAH" (as in "mark") + "doh" (as in "door")/
Stoned, high on marijuana. You can spot a fumado by the red eyes, the easy laugh, and the slow or scattered thoughts. A casual descriptor in Mexico, Chile, and Argentina with no particular moral charge.
“He showed up to class completely stoned and could not understand anything.”
“The ones who arrived high to the after-party fell asleep on the couch within an hour.”
/Sounds like "foo" (as in "food") + "MAH" (as in "mark") + "doh" (as in "door")/
A person who says or does absurd, nonsensical things as if they were under the influence of something. Also used literally for someone who's actually smoked weed.
“What are you saying? You're totally fumado.”
“He showed up to class all fumado and couldn't understand anything.”
Showing 2 definitions, sorted by votes
Your word isn't here yet
Join Hablaaa and add the expression no one else has documented.
/Sounds like "foo" (as in "food") + "MAH" (as in "mark") + "doh" (as in "door")/
Stoned, high on marijuana. You can spot a fumado by the red eyes, the easy laugh, and the slow or scattered thoughts. A casual descriptor in Mexico, Chile, and Argentina with no particular moral charge.
“He showed up to class completely stoned and could not understand anything.”
“The ones who arrived high to the after-party fell asleep on the couch within an hour.”
/Sounds like "foo" (as in "food") + "MAH" (as in "mark") + "doh" (as in "door")/
A person who says or does absurd, nonsensical things as if they were under the influence of something. Also used literally for someone who's actually smoked weed.
“What are you saying? You're totally fumado.”
“He showed up to class all fumado and couldn't understand anything.”
Showing 2 definitions, sorted by votes
A cluster of small homes arranged around a shared central courtyard in Mexico, where multiple families live together and everyone knows each other's business. Think El Chavo del 8: neighbors who borrow everything, argue loudly, and somehow always look out for each other. A piece of traditional Mexican urban life that still exists in many city centers.