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00743 11 40 C 11 55. 007431 69 40 69 C 47. The complete collection of recipes by Tía Clara, most of them, traditional Dominican recipes, others inspired by our Dominican taste, and by my life and travels. Dominican Cooking” is the oldest and largest Dominican cooking website, with Tía Clara’s 20-year collection of traditional Dominican recipes, and recipes inspired by the Dominican taste.

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The Andean dialect, particularly in the state of Táchira, near the Colombian border, is characterized by a nonaspirated pronunciation of ‘s’, and use of usted instead of tú even in informal contexts. That phonetic trait, unique in the Americas, is from the large number of northern Spanish settlers in Andean Venezuela. The Central dialect, a characteristic marked accent whose use is very common in cities like Caracas, La Guaira, Los Teques, Maracay and Valencia. One of its characteristics is a considerable aboriginal lexicon, a product of the fusion of both languages. Isla Margarita and the northeast of mainland Venezuela. The Margaritan dialect sometimes has an interdental for pre-vowel ‘s’, and uses a strong ‘r’ instead of ‘l’ for most words. The Venezuelan dialect influences Papiamento, the language spoken and taught most in Aruba, Bonaire, and Curaçao.

The Zulian in the northwest of the country, also called maracucho or marabino, uses voseo. Venezuelan Spanish, like that of the rest of Spanish America and Castilian in general, has taken many words from indigenous languages. A mamar que llegó Tío Rico. A person of slow thought or slow reasoning. Someone passive, or lacking seduction skills.

To be thinking slowly or with poor reasoning, being a sucker. To be excited or in a frenzy. To tightly yet disorderly put things together. In baseball it also means a score of zero. On the other hand, if something is arrecho, it is very good. To gather people disorderly in a small space. To turn up at a party without being invited.

Get your head out of the clouds”. Often built upwards on hillsides, they are a distinct and noticeable feature of the landscape in large cities in Venezuela. A problematic or otherwise interesting situation. For instance: “When we were at the party se armó un beta and the police arrived”. Used as a noun, it can also mean a firearm, mostly a pistol. Disorder, chaos, but usually in a funny way.

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