narcocorrido
English
Etymology
From Spanish narcocorrido, from narco- (“drug”) + corrido (“ballad”).
Noun
narcocorrido (countable and uncountable, plural narcocorridos)
- (music) A genre of Mexican music based on the polka, depicting drug smugglers, cartels, and other criminal activities.
- (music, countable) Any song in this genre.
- 2007 February 19, Ben Ratliff, “Singing Stories From Lives Lived Far Away From Home”, in New York Times[1]:
- They were nonjudgmental first-person stories, including the notorious narcocorrido “Pacas de a Kilo,” (“One-Kilo Packets”) told from the point of view of a proud marijuana grower.
Further reading
- narcocorrido on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Spanish
Etymology
From narco- (“drug trafficking”) + corrido (“folk song”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /naɾkokoˈrido/ [naɾ.ko.koˈri.ð̞o]
- Rhymes: -ido
- Syllabification: nar‧co‧co‧rri‧do
Noun
narcocorrido m (plural narcocorridos)
Further reading
- “narcocorrido”, in Diccionario de la lengua española [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (in Spanish), online version 23.8, Royal Spanish Academy [Spanish: Real Academia Española], 10 December 2024