forum join di lime
tap
Belna 9 years ago
Slap on the back of the head
1 comment
nightingale
lysa 9 years ago
what does this bird eat<br /> and how much times do you have to feed their young
1 comment
pree
s
sherf 9 years ago
my country not in the list (GHANA)..., But a great site tho.
1 comment
ker
Flobert 9 years ago
ker - carry, or to take . depends on how you use it.<br /><br /> ker this ova so. = carry/ take this over there
1 comment
turkey berry
christine 9 years ago
had gully beans for dinner last was so good
1 comment
Dance a yard before yu dance abroad
slintins 9 years ago
yuh
1 comment
lamveritab
ally 9 years ago
hi
1 comment
bandoo
ria 9 years ago
Another French word where the ending sounds differently than spelt
2 comments
goudblad boom
THYEMA 9 years ago
TIS LIKE A NICE
1 comment
gonzalito
THYEMA 9 years ago
MI LIKE DE COLOUR FI TIS
1 comment
banana bird
Laurel Persaud 9 years ago
Kiskadee
2 comments
turpial
Richard 9 years ago
beautiful bird, and do not leave banana's laying about. They will enter the house through open window or doors and unzip a banana in minutea and eat the inside. Fun to watch such a bird. Also have seen them in Curacao.
2 comments
juju
Marcelle 9 years ago
We call it dungs in Guyana.
1 comment
cornichon
Nigel Boos 9 years ago
If this is the same fruit as the one called "Carambola", then it is extremely bitter. I first found the "Carambola" while driving to Galeota Point to work. The single tree sood on the right-hand side of the road, shortly after passing Grande Chiquito, south of S. Grande. I understand that it is dried, sweetened and used as a preserved fruit in fruit cakes at Christmas-time in Guyana.
1 comment
zanana
Imelda Negretti 9 years ago
Pineapples are a big commercial crop in Trinidad
2 comments
If yu nu go unda fowl coob, fowl cyaa shit pan yu
justice dore 9 years ago
u nu fi cus bad word pan computer
2 comments
chapaulin
Brudda Bob 9 years ago
Funny, I see this word here. A friend of mine migrated from Guyana 2 decades ago, went to Home Depot and asking for a tampolin. The reps. didn't know what he was referring to until he started to describe the item. Imagine a raw accented person asking for": Ayuh gat tampolin? What? Tampolin man tampolin!
1 comment
gutaperk
♥Aisha♥ 9 years ago
Everybody call me this slingshot✴
1 comment
idren
l
luke 9 years ago
you are cool (not)
1 comment
siwet
Stephen 9 years ago
Raspberry in Antigua
1 comment
bruk up
h 9 years ago
Jamaicans say this too
1 comment
Every mickle mek a muckle
renice 9 years ago
TRUE.
1 comment
gombey
Bernadette 9 years ago
Goombay is the official music of the Bahamas. It is also the name of a festival that was commonly held in the Bahamas.
1 comment
johnkankus
bernadette 9 years ago
Junkanoo is celebrated in the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos. It is said to be celebrated on a much larger scale than Jamaica or Turks and Caicos
1 comment
ganda
Ganga 10 years ago
Ganga not ganda
1 comment
bud peppa
S
Susan Laura Salandy-Moolchan 10 years ago
Bird peppers here because they are consumed and spread by birds through droppings
3 comments
bhaigan
S
Susan Laura Salandy-Moolchan 10 years ago
Also aubergine
3 comments
hog apple
joel 10 years ago
sweet dunham
1 comment
washy kong
Andy 10 years ago
Yachting in Guyana
1 comment
bingy
Andy 10 years ago
In Barbados it is called a guttaperk. I am told that the name came from a German brand of inner tubing of a tyre named Gutta Percha or something like that (spelling may be off but phonetics correct..) but as usual bajans will find a way of truncating or altering the sound to make it easy for them to say...
1 comment
big ring play
Exydus Zepreasha 10 years ago
This very incorrect. A ring play is basically a ring game for adults. An example of such would be 'Sen Mi Nicki'. They're generally played by children but contain adult content upfront or coded.
1 comment
gold eye
B Sarv 10 years ago
Spotted this for the first time in my area. Robert Estates near Nobert, Grande Riviere
1 comment
suck rock
labell 10 years ago
In st Vincent and the grenadines we call them long back.
3 comments
stamp and go
sm 10 years ago
Fritters
2 comments
benny cake
June 10 years ago
In Tobago, these are made into round treats and called benne balls.
1 comment
ti po
R
Remy Free 10 years ago
Possibly from the mis-hearing/pronounciation of the English slang word - Tipple
1 comment
backa
smh 10 years ago
never heard of this in saint lucia
1 comment
capok tree
Anon 10 years ago
Is this the same as Kapok as in Kapok Hotel?
1 comment
wet fowl
Amber 10 years ago
I've always heard wet fowl used to describe someone in a bad mood.
2 comments
flim
Claudette 10 years ago
Jamaican people seh 'flim,' hence flim show. Moving pictures.
1 comment
ass up
It means I'm pissed 10 years ago
Said when one is pissed off!
1 comment
kurma
dapur 10 years ago
Shouldn't this be a noun, instead of a preposition?
1 comment
Every day da nu Sundeh
dede1012 10 years ago
She who feels it, knows it. Once you have been through something, you can empathize with others.
1 comment
boonoonoonus
Nate 10 years ago
Sweetheart
1 comment
bonghead
Andrew 10 years ago
Nope. We dont use this. We normally use 'Weed Head'
2 comments
crofi
Andrew 10 years ago
not all Belizeans are Crofi. The term crofi means a person who is over interested in free items and often over extending their welcome. A despicable person
1 comment
belly cork
Lee 10 years ago
I've also heard this to describe the feeling of being very full after a large meal.
1 comment
yoyo
Desiree 10 years ago
recipe?
1 comment
melongene
g
gtb 10 years ago
hey food is nt soo important
2 comments
food
wulf 10 years ago
yes. i believe so.
2 comments