🗣️ A Beginner’s Guide to Medellín Slang and Colombian Expressions
- Nomadic House

- 24 dic 2025
- 2 Min. de lectura
Want to sound like a local in Medellín? Understanding the lively Paisa slang (Parlache) will help you connect, blend in, and have fun navigating the city.
📌 1. Greetings & Everyday Phrases
¿Qué más? ¿Bien o no? / ¿Quiubo? – “What’s up? You good?” – common Paisa greetings colombiaspanish.com+14baselang.com+14medellinadvisors.com+14.
Parce / Parcero – “Friend” or “buddy” – locals use it universally en.wikipedia.org+9medellinadvisors.com+9baselang.com+9. E.g. “¿Qué más, parce?”
👍 2. Positive Expressions
Bacano / Bacana – “Awesome” or “cool” storylearning.com+13latg.org+13baselang.com+13baselang.com+1lingotogo.cool+1. “¡Esa fiesta estuvo bacana!”
Chimba – Another way to say something’s excellent en.wikipedia.org+3latg.org+3lingotogo.cool+3.
Bien frío / Bien rico – Used to praise food or drinks (“super cold,” “really good”) medellinadvisors.com+9baselang.com+9baselang.com+9.
😂 3. Describing the Mood
Charro – Funny, amusing baselang.com+3colombiaspanish.com+3latg.org+3.
Achantado – Feeling down, sad baselang.com+1en.wikipedia.org+1.
Mamado/a – Exhausted or fed up thesweetestway.com+8spanish.yabla.com+8en.wikipedia.org+8.
🎉 4. Social & Party Slang
Parche (go out) / Parchar (hang out) – Plan or a hangout session digitalnomads.world+14lingotogo.cool+14baselang.com+14.
Rumba / Rumbear – Party or go partying medellinadvisors.com+2storylearning.com+2en.wikipedia.org+2.
Pola – A cold beer latg.org.
🚨 5. Warning & Caution Phrases
Dar papaya – To unwisely expose yourself to risk thesweetestway.com+1en.wikipedia.org+1.
Pilas – Be alert or pay attention .
😅 6. Humorous or Mildly Vulgar Terms
Chiviado – Fake or low quality medellinadvisors.com+6baselang.com+6en.wikipedia.org+6.
Gonorrea / Carechimba – Friendly or harsh insult depending on tone spanish.yabla.com+2latg.org+2en.wikipedia.org+2.
Vaina – Thing, situation, or annoyance en.wikipedia.org+1lingotogo.cool+1.
🙂 7. Yes and No, Paisa Style
Sisas – Yes .
Nanay cucas – No way! youtube.com+11matadornetwork.com+11medellinadvisors.com+11.
🎯 Conversational Examples
“¿Qué más, parce? ¿Pilas hoy para parche?” (“What’s up, buddy? You up for hanging out today?”)
“La rumba anoche estuvo bacana, ¿sí que sí?” (“The party last night was awesome, right?”)
“No des papaya en el bus, pilas con tus cosas.” (“Don’t expose yourself on the bus, watch your things.”)
✅ Why Learning Slang Matters
Builds rapport – Use expressions to break the ice and connect quickly.
Boosts confidence – You’ll understand jokes, playlists, and casual chats.
Shows respect – Effort to learn slang is appreciated and shows cultural respect medellinadvisors.com+10reddit.com+10baselang.com+10baselang.comen.wikipedia.org+1thesweetestway.com+1.
🚀 Ready to Blend In?
Try phrases weekly: Test one in context to see reactions.
Be mindful of tone: Some slang is casual or coarse—listen first.
Immerse in media: Follow Paisa YouTubers and locals to absorb flow and usage.
Learning Medellín slang is more than fun—it tells locals you care. Start with the basics, and soon you’ll feel—and sound—like a Paisa friend. 🌟




Comentarios