Mind your language!
Extreme discretion must be exercised while using these words as improper usage could cause social damage beyond repairs. In español puertorriqueño, for instance, chocha is a slur for vagina (like cunt in English), while in Mexico it would represent a bird! To a Boricua (a Puerto Rican), a sea-shell is called concha while the same word is a vulgar slang for vagina in Argentina! Another example would be that in Puerto Rico, the word bizcocho means cake, while in Mexico it refers to a woman’s genitals.
Do not use Boricua slang unless you are very confident! Photo credit: Kevin licensed CC BY-SA 2.0 |
La lengua boriqueño
Boricua is the local word for puertorriqueños Photo credit: Robert & Pam licensed CC BY-SA 2.0 |
acho – mainly used as a filler word between conversations
mano – buddy
colgar – to screw up/to goof up/to mess up
¿Qué es la que? – Wassup?
joder/chichar/chingar – to fuck
dar un tumbe – to be going to kill or steal
dejar los tennis en el piso – to run too fast
estar brutal – to be brutal (could be either a compliment or an insult, depending on the situation)
estar cabron – to be an ass (same as estar brutal; usually a criticism when used for a person, a compliment when for a non-human subject)
Las cosas se pusieron a chavito prieto. – Things turned for a penny each. (Used to comically describe a serious economic problem)
Los huevos se pusieron duros. – The eggs turned hard. (Same as “las cosas se pusieron a chavito prieto”)
¡Miércoles! – Shit! (A less offensive-sounding word than mierda)
The Boricua Spanish has become a widely recognized dialect today Photo credit: Roca Ruiz licensed CC BY-SA 2.0 |
formarse un sal pa fuera – forming of a get-out-of-here situation (describing a violent situation, e.g., a street fight, where many ran away from the scene)
formarse un corre y corre – forming of a race for everyone to get out of there (a comical way of describing a get-out-of-here situation)
¡Se lucio el chayote! – The coyote is showing-off! (An insult for speeding/honking drivers or drivers who screech their wheels while parking)
¡Tanto nadar para ahogarse en la orilla! – Much swimming, only to drown at the shore! (Indicating a situation where someone fails when on the verge of success)
cagarse del miedo – to shit in one’s pants out of fear
ser bien fiebru(a) – to be really into that (an admiration for someone’s passion for something)
¡Va pa chirola! – Someone is going to jail!
¡Vete pa’l carajo! – Go to hell! (Insult; sometimes followed by a so cabrón/cabrona)
¡Vete pa’l Caribe Hilton! – Go to hell! (Less insulting version of ¡Vete pa’l carajo!)
volando bajito – flying low (used for speeding drivers)
¡Y se le(s) esta haciendo tarde! – And it’s already getting too late! (Sport phrase used when an individual or team is far behind on scoring as the event nears its conclusion)
comemierda – snob (literally, shit-eater)
mamabicho – cocksucker (same as chupaverga in Mexico)
Feeling adventurous?
These are words and phrases that no Spanish dictionary under the sun would ever talk about. And there are many, many of them for the inquisitive learner in you. The streets of Puerto Rico have, over the years, churned enough slangs and colloquial expressions to warrant a thesaurus of their own. Therefore, needless to say, your best bet would be someone actually living in the country. Make Boricua chat-friends and enrich your vocabulary if you intend to become a puertorriqueño some day!
By the way, here’s a really good book of Boricua slang: Language of the Puerto Rican street: A slang dictionary with English cross-reference; by Cristino Gallo distributed in Puerto Rico by Book Service of Puerto Rico (1980); ISBN 0960417400; ISBN 978-0960417407. Of course you will most likely wish to buy it when “not” in Puerto Rico in which case, you can easily order it off Amazon®.