combustible [m] lit. fuel; alcohol, an intake of an alcoholic drink, thought of having a reanimating or cheering-up effect.

反义词:incombustible 

concheto/a [m, f, adj] [derogatory] an older form of careta.

copado/a [m, f, adj] [appreciative, becoming old-fashioned] cool, a good thing, a nice thing or person (see macanudo). Especially applied to people, places and occasions like parties.

corralito [m] [new word (first attested November 2001)] lit. 'little corral, small pen, little enclosed space', the set of financial restrictions implemented by minister Domingo Cavallo of the De la Rúa administration to prevent growing amounts of money to be withdrawn from bank accounts, by decreeing that people will have to get their salaries by check only, imposing weekly and monthly limits on the amount of money in banks allowed for withdrawal (initially 250 pesos a week, 1000 pesos a month), and completely freezing some types of bank accounts, thus leaving people's savings trapped for an indefinite time. These measures were intended to keep the bank system from collapsing and avoid foreign currency (dollars) to leave the country, but were soon breached, and they deepened an already monstrous recession. (The government fell a month later.) -- Lessened restrictions implemented later received the name corralón ('big pen').

crepar [vi] to die, to pass away.

crepar 还有使头发卷曲的意思

cuero [m] leather, animal skin; [fixed phrase] sacar el cuero lit. 'to remove the skin (from sbdy)', to speak (esp. badly) of someone who is not present, to gossip about someone.

culo [m] [taboo] 1 [not slang] bottom, low end (of a bottle); ass, butt (of a person); culos de botella ('bottle bottoms'): a pair of glasses with very thick lenses; 2 good luck, esp. in games (see orto).

curro [m] a scam, a fraud, a deception; a dirty business, an illegal arrangement. The corresponding verb is currar [vt]. Note that this word means 'work, job' (no negative connotations) in Spain.

dedo [m] lit. finger; hacer dedo hitch-hike; a dedo (appointed) by the will of someone in power, without consulting with anyone else or following criteria for selection (as if merely pointing at the person with the index finger) -- as is routine for the designation of non-elected political officials; A la mitad de la Corte Suprema la puso Menem a dedo 'Half of the Supreme Court was appointed by (former President Carlos) Menem...'. Journalists popularized the cult alternative digitar, lit. 'to key in with a finger' for the same meaning.

despelote [m] a mess, an occasion of great confusion, an organizational disaster. Etymology: from the privative preffix des- (English des-, de-, dis-) and pelot- 'ball' (fig. 'testicle'). The ending -e is curiously found often in words of occasion with a negative connotation (see embole and despiole).