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100 Of The Best Curses and Insults In Spanish: A Toolkit for the Testy Tourist
COPYRIGHT
HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd.
1 London Bridge Street
London SE1 9GF
www.harpercollins.co.uk
First published by HarperCollinsPublishers 2009
Copyright © 2009 Rachel Perez
Illustrations by Chuck Gonzales
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins ebooks
HarperCollinsPublishers has made every reasonable effort to ensure that any picture content and written content in this ebook has been included or removed in accordance with the contractual and technological constraints in operation at the time of publication
Source ISBN: 9780007851485
Ebook Edition © APRIL 2017 ISBN: 9780007483471
Version: 2017-05-02
DEDICATION
To Margaret
Thank you Jeannine for great revisions and suggestions and irritating people
the world over for inspiring the scenarios. Also special thanks to Eva Martinez, Antonio
Martinez, Tesi Villanueva, Neil Dowden, and Silke Braun for all their work on the book.
CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Learn How to Give ’em Hell Like a Native!
Pronouncing Spanish
Situation #1: Empanada Bandidos
Situation #2: Revenge of the Yanquis
Situation #3: Cerveza Goggles
Situation #4: Is that a Fertilized Egg in There or are You Just Overweight?
Situation #5: Battle of the Bulge
Situation #6: The Sun also Presses the Snooze Button
Situation #7: Two Left Feet
Situation #8: Urban Sombrero
Situation #9: Ashes to Asses
Situation #10: Running of the Bullies
Situation #11: Fútbol Follies
Situation #12: Ancient Truths
Situation #13: The Rain in Spain
Situation #14: In Vino Veritas
Situation #15: Vista Conquistador
Situation #16: Dropping the Eavesdropper!
Situation #17: Not so Jolly Giant
Situation #18: Thou Shall not Mooch
Situation #19: Aircraft Guitar
Situation #20: Sangría Wars
Situation #21: Someone in Portugal can’t Hear You
Situation #22: Planeta of the Apes
Situation #23: “Are we Having Fun Yet?”
Situation #24: Siestas for the Rest of Us
Situation #25: Logorrhea
Situation #26: Don Juan Wannabe
Situation #27: El Rastro Rascal
Situation #28: Nevermind the Bollocks
Situation #29: Mira, Mira on the Wall …
Situation #30: Real Hombres Eat Meat
Situation #31: Getting Soaked Without a Drop to Drink
Situation #32: Radio Daze
Situation #33: Got Agua?
Situation #34: Empire Strikes Back
Situation #35: Chili Reception
Situation #36: There Goes the Sun
Situation #37: Loco Flamenco
Situation #38: An Excruciating Epiphany
Situation #39: Frost in Translation
Situation #40: Hit the Road, Jacinto!
Situation #41: The Barefoot Contessa
Situation #42: Sea Dreams
Situation #43: Matador Brats
Situation #44: The Artful Dodger
Situation #45: Fresh Fruit
About the Publisher
LEARN HOW TO GIVE ’EM HELL LIKE A NATIVE!
If you don’t have anything nice to say, then say it! There are heaps of great put-downs, clever comebacks, unflattering analogies, and other unpleasantries to choose from, especially in Spanish! But wait a minute. With the beautiful beaches, great wine, enchanting music, laid-back companions, and all-night revelry, what could possibly go wrong? Well, you could be stomped on by a flamenco dancer, for one, bullied on the day of a bullfight, stabbed with toothpicks in a tapas frenzy, or even be mistaken for a piñata. What if some little rascals get their hands on your empanadas or your perfect view of el mar gets blocked by body parts that should never have seen the light of day?
When it comes to foul language, preoccupations with sex and genitalia cross cultural boundaries, as do garden-variety attacks on size and intelligence. Yet Spanish has quite a colorful array of ways to get even and come out on top. Sure, you should practice saying buenos diás, lo siento, and ¿cómo están?, but sometimes it’s not a good day and you’re not sorry. After all, a brutish woman could have cut you off on the sangria line after you waited an eternity for a taste of the fruity delight or a jackass with a mullet might be ruining every shot you take in Barcelona.
In this book, you’ll find forty-five aggravating scenarios that you might—even in the land of siestas and fiestas—find yourself in, along with advice on how to get out of them, what to say, and why it’s okay to say it.
Hopefully your trip will be as care- and incident-free as a walk in el parque. But if you find yourself hot under the collar in the land of the sun, you know where to turn. Whether you sling these, fling them, or pronounce them with delicacy and finesse, make sure you always get in the last word … or at least the most offensive.
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