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After a pilot

I'd been studying conversational English for a year and was delighted with my progress. I loved experimenting with new vocab and when out shopping in London's Selfridges with my host family, I decided to show off with some new words. I wanted to buy a raincoat, which is called in Argentina un piloto, so I guessed the word in English and asked the assistant 'I'd like a pilot, please'!

Editor's note: Un piloto is Argentinian Spanish for a raincoat. In Spain the word is un impermeable.

Sent by: Hilda

Comments

Miguel, Madrid 2009-09-09

In Spain you can also say "chubasquero" for a raincoat.

By the way Trevor, I find it kind of funny to spread butter on "facturas", which in Spain means "bills", lol.

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Suso Moinhos 2008-07-19

Anyway, if you were in Spain, you could simply say, in teenager's slang: chupa. The word chupa became very familiar and covers all kind of coats.

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CJ 2007-12-31

Chumpa or chompa probably came from the UK use of "jumper" to mean what we in the US call a sweater.

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Christian 2007-09-27

In El Salvadorian Spanish we say chaqueta for raincoat. Others refer to it as a chumpa.

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Murat 2007-08-03

We call raincoat yagmurluk in Turkey.

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Mastache 2006-07-22

In Mexico City, we use un impermeable for raincoat, una gabardina is a broader term for coats.

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Trevor 2005-10-12

In Argentinean Spanish, manteca means butter. I remember spreading delicious and clearly labelled manteca on my toasts, croissants, and facturas, pastry scones. I later discovered on a subsequent vacation to Mexico City, that manteca means lard in the rest of the world! Yuck!

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Munoz 2005-09-29

In Mexico City we say una gabardina, raincoat.

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