Boludo
Fool or idiot, but also the affectionate 'dude' that glues Argentine conversation together.
Definitions
A fool, idiot, or jerk. The source is Spanish 'boludo', literally 'having big balls', historically linked to a (likely folk) story of front-line soldiers; as an insult it means dim-witted, the opposite of clever.
Used affectionately between friends as 'dude' or 'mate', drained of its insult force entirely.
As a discourse filler ('che boludo') punctuating casual speech, especially among younger porteños.
Boludo In A Sentence
Origin & Usage
Spanish/Rioplatense slang long absorbed into porteno everyday speech and documented alongside Lunfardo by the Academia Portena del Lunfardo; the literal 'big-balled' sense is clear, but the popular soldiers-of-the-front origin story is folk etymology and unverified.
People Also Ask
What does boludo mean?
Literally a fool or idiot, but among friends it works as an affectionate 'dude' or 'mate'.
Is boludo rude?
It's vulgar in its insult sense but completely casual and friendly between people who know each other.
Where did boludo come from?
From Spanish 'boludo' (big-balled); the famous war-origin tale is folk etymology, not confirmed.
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