The two most common words for "pig" in Spanish are "cerdo" and "marrano".cerdo, or puerco
"cerdo", "puerco", "cochino", "marrano".
ficar de cerdo puerco volando
Pork chop is "chuletas de cerdo"
I know that cochina is a rude/offensive way of referring to a woman. [slut, slag, etc]
"I have a pig in the.." "I have a pig at the.." Depends of the context.
Pig
nos = us cerdo = pig, hog
Cerdo.
Cerambyx cerdo was created in 1758.
It is "cerdo", "puerco", or "carne de cerdo".
"Cerdo" is a word for "pig."
La Guerra del cerdo was created in 1975.
¡Cerdo, a! ¡Cerdos, as! ¡Marrano, a / marranos, as! ¡Puerco, a / puercos, as!
It depends on which country you're from!The most universally understood way to say it would probably be:chuleta de cerdo or chuleta de puerco (chuleta = chop, cerdo/puerco = pork)But if you're from Argentina, you might say:costillas de cerdo or costeletas de cerdo (instead of chuleta)And if you're from Chile, you'll probably say:chuleta de chancho (instead of cerdo or puerco)
The two most common words for "pig" in Spanish are "cerdo" and "marrano".cerdo, or puerco
"The pig" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase el cerdo.Specifically, the masculine singular definite article el means "the". The masculine noun cerdo translates as "hog, pig, swine" according to context. The pronunciation will be "el SER-tho" or "el THER-tho" depending upon the Spanish speaker's birthplace.