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what is janguió

what is janguió

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What is "janguió"

1292 views
updated May 28, 2013
posted by educatedgirl

9 Answers

2
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Janguió appears to be the third person preterite tense form of the slang verb "Janguiar" meaning "to hang out" or something to that effect.

updated May 28, 2013
posted by PumpkinCalabaza
2
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Janguió mean he/she was party all night with friends. Derived from Janguear.

Also in baseball a bad slide, some say hanger or me la janguió

updated May 28, 2013
posted by Pablo_Zamarro
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"Domingo de Ramos, el 21 de marzo de 1937"

D'make a great name for a PR heavy metal rock band.

updated May 28, 2013
posted by EugenioCosta
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Como nota histórica y para gorjeodores, Pancho Villa fue un gran danzador, un abstemio, y el ingenio surrealista quien hizo la primera y la mejor película surrealista.

As a historical note and for twitterers, Pancho Villa was a great dancer, a teetotaler, and the surrealist genius who made the first and greatest surrealist film.

updated May 28, 2013
posted by EugenioCosta
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"Lady Gaga janguió ayer en discoteca Levels en Saturce y dicen estuvo muy accesible "

Wow! Looks like "hang out". Anyone know who this Lady Gaga is?

updated May 28, 2013
edited by EugenioCosta
posted by EugenioCosta
Not personally, thank God! - 00551866, May 28, 2013
Jeje. - EugenioCosta, May 28, 2013
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Naming it "Twitter" is an insult to birds.

Bautizarlo "Gorjeo" es un insulto para los pajaros.

updated May 28, 2013
edited by EugenioCosta
posted by EugenioCosta
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En PR tienen "janguiar".

updated May 28, 2013
posted by EugenioCosta
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"Janguir" quiere decir "gágame con una cuchara"?

updated May 28, 2013
edited by EugenioCosta
posted by EugenioCosta
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Ah, well, hoosegow is in origin juzgado.

Slang is a vibrant part of language. The problem comes when it drifts toward becoming a monoculture among its deprived and thoroughly alienated adepts, who should be considered a new class produced by modern Capitalism in its last gasp, to wit, "the self-exploited".

updated May 28, 2013
posted by EugenioCosta
And, naturally, what applies to slang, appllies also to slanglish, spanglish, anglish, usw. - EugenioCosta, May 28, 2013