travel_explore explore, browse, discover
ponche crema
A cream-based liqueur. Main ingredients typically include milk, eggs, sugar, rum, and other minor ingredients such as vanilla, nutmeg, cinnamon, and lemon rind. A variant type is prepared with concentrated liquid coffee or instant coffee powder.
food
1 comments
pone
A baked desert item similar to bread pudding that is made with various ingredients. The primary ingredients include flour, sugar, and some or all of the following in any combination: cassava, coco, sweet potato, cornmeal. In some countries a traditional method of preparation involves baking with a fire source above as well as below. This gives rise to the expression "Hell a top, hell a bottom, hallelujah in the middle".
food
1 comments
pooah
Father's sister
person
family
1 comments
poohar
Messy
10 comments
poor me one
Someone who feels sorry for his or her self.
person
pop poi
A torpedo, oval, or pear shaped fruit. The fruit bears on a large leafed tree up to 10m tall. When green, it is cooked as if a vegetable. The flesh contains an enzyme named papain that serves as an effective meat tenderiser. When ripe it is yellowish-orange in colour. The flesh is bright orange, soft, and sweet. The insides are hollow containing a lots of seeds with each seed contained in a small liquid filled sac. The seeds and the fluid surrounding them have a bitter taste.
plant
food
fruit
1 comments
popho
Father's sister's husband
person
family
popo
Baby
person
3 comments
portugal
Mandarin orange or tangerine.
food
fruit
plant
posey
Chamber pot.
2 comments
pot belly
A large protruding stomach, or a stomach that overhangs the waist.
pothound
A mongrel dog. A dog of indeterminate breed.
animal
31 comments
press
A sweet treat (primarily for children) made with ice and syrup. The ice is packed or pressed in a small glass where it sticks together. It is then removed from the glass and coated with flavoured syrup.
food
1 comments
pride of trinidad and tobago
Warszewiczia coccinea (or Chaconia, Wild Poinsettia and Pride of Trinidad and Tobago) is a species of flowering plant in the Rubiaceae family. It is the national flower of Trinidad and Tobago because it blooms on 31 August, which coincides with the day that Trinidad and Tobago became independent from Great Britain. It was named Chaconia after Trinidad's last colonial Spanish Governor Don Jose Maria Chacon, who is credited with a vast upgrading of the island and its capital Port of Spain.
national symbol
plant
2 comments
primrose
A yellow fruit with crisp flesh and a large hollow cavity containing a single seed. The fruit has a strong fragrance reminiscent of rose water. The trees tend to grow in shaded valleys and close to rivers.
food
16 comments
provision
A class of foods that includes mainly green bananas and/or root vegetables like potatoes, yams, tanias etc
food
5 comments
puddin
Sausage made by cooking blood with a filler until it is thick enough to congeal when cooled.
food
pumpum
The vagina. The female sexual organ.
4 comments
pumpum shorts
Female pants, typically short shorts, that are tight enough that the imprints of the genitals are clearly visible
punani
The vagina. The female sexual organ.
1 comments
put away the house
To decorate
1 comments
puttygal
Mandarin orange or tangerine.
food
fruit
plant
11 comments
quarrel
Fighting,arguing
quenk
Old and ugly
1 comments
raff
To grab suddenly
ragadang
Broken Down
rambutan
The tree and fruit of Nephelium lappaceum. Related to the lychee and guinep, the medium sized tree produces bunches of small fruit with a hairy, bright red or reddish orange skin. The edible fruit has pale flesh surrounding a single seed.
food
fruit
plant
8 comments
rasta
Rastafarian. A practitioner of Rastafarianism, a religious sect whose members are usually identifiable by their dreadlocked hair.
1 comments
renk
Having a strong unpleasant urine-like smell
1 comments
rice and peas
A dish made from rice and peas or beans. Red kidney beans and gungo are commonly used. The dish is typically prepared with coconut milk and lots of seasoning.
food
31 comments