Thrissur Slang Dialogues In Malayalam

"Nee pattichal pattikko, dē pattani. Enikku vayya ninte koothaadikk." (You can keep blabbering, hey peanut. I can't stand your buffoonery.)

Literally meaning "beloved" or "liked one," it is used casually to address almost anyone. Unique Expressive Terms: thrissur slang dialogues in malayalam

📍 If you really want to blend in, start your sentences with a long "Appo..." (So...) and end them with a questioning "Alle?" (Right?). "Nee pattichal pattikko, dē pattani

This is perhaps the most recognizable word in the Thrissur dictionary. "What is it?" or "What's up?" Unique Expressive Terms: 📍 If you really want

| Standard Malayalam | Thrissur Slang | Meaning in English | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Ivide (Here) | | Over here (aggressive) | | Avide (There) | Akkan | Over there | | Kalla Karyam | Patti Kolu | Lie / Nonsense | | Lunch | Choru Kazhikkal | Having rice (Sacred activity) | | Kumbalam (Pumpkin) | Thenga (Coconut) | Wait, this is tricky. Thrissur people call everything round a "Thenga." A football is Kaal thenga . A pumpkin is Mathanga thenga . A car wheel is Chakrathu thenga . |

While it literally means "mirror," in Thrissur slang, it can be used to call someone a "fool" or "useless person". Thrissur Slang in Popular Culture

So the next time a Thrissur friend greets you not with a "Hello" but with a loud (Hey dog, are you here?), don't be offended. Hug them. Because in the Soorya City, that is the highest form of love.