pandejo
English
Etymology
Likely borrowed from Spanish pandejo (see below), or formed in English from pandemic and Spanish pendejo (“contemptible person”). Attested from 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pænˈdeɪhoʊ/
Noun
pandejo (plural pandejos)
- (derogatory, neologism) One who is foolishly reckless around COVID-19.
- Synonym: covidiot
- 2021 August 4, Gustavo Arellano, “At my wife's Santa Ana market, the masks have never come off”, in The Los Angeles Times:
- This is infamously "pandejo" central — the home of pandemic pendejos, or blockheads.
Spanish
This Spanish term is a hot word. Its inclusion on Wiktionary is provisional.
Etymology
Blend of pandemia (“pandemic”) + pendejo (“stupid person; contemptible person”). Attested from 2020.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /panˈdexo/ [pãn̪ˈd̪e.xo]
- Rhymes: -exo
- Syllabification: pan‧de‧jo
Noun
pandejo m (plural pandejos, feminine pandeja, feminine plural pandejas)
- (derogatory) one who is foolishly reckless around COVID-19
- Synonym: covidiota
References
- 2020 December 4, Gustavo Arellano, “No sea ‘pandejo’, tómese en serio la pandemia”, in Los Angeles Times:
- ¿Nunca oyó hablar del término? Se acuñó recientemente; una palabra compuesta de “pandemia” y “pendejo”, el término que usan los mexicanos para referirse a un tonto. Pandejo es un vocablo poco amable — pero tristemente preciso — para describir a los “covidiotas” latinos que se burlan con orgullo de los protocolos para combatir el coronavirus.
- Never heard the word? It’s newly minted; a word composed of “pandemic” and “pendejo”, a term Mexicans use to refer to fools. Pandejo is not a very nice word – but sadly accurate – to describe Latino “covidiots” who proudly mock the protocols meant to combat the coronavirus.
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