LiCR,
This is an interesting one... jejeje. [tl;dr - "uebos"]
Literally that means "Send Eggs". However we get here in quite a roundabout way. All the way back in Old Spanish to the early 13th century or thereabouts... and of course Latin before that (maybe... some word researchers disagree.) There is a story (that is widely considered false) that this saying came to being directly from the mouth of, or should I say, the humongous Hasbury Jaw that made John Kerry's chin look like that of Don Knotts, of the ill-fated and most assuredly incredibly inbred Carlos II ("El Hechizado" / The Bewitched) King of Spain. The king reigned from the time he was 3 until he died 35 years later (1665-1700) without an heir, corroded lungs, rotten intestines and a single atrophied testicle "black as coal".
His reign has traditionally been viewed as one of decline and decay... I would argue, none of that was his fault. The inbreeding by European nobles certainly had been going on for a couple hundred years before Carlos was born, and as I mentioned earlier, he didn't participate. Government finances were in perpetual crisis during the hundred years leading up to the birth of poor Carlos II, with the Crown officially declaring bankruptcy 9 times during that period. Anyway, as interesting as that may be, the story goes that with the kingdom plunged into a deep economic crisis, King Carlos II entrusted a favored duke with the supervision of the state accounts. The duke began a journey throughout the kingdom, trying to understand areas of waste that could be eliminated and find places he could raise more taxes to enrich the treasury. Among the oddities of "The Bewitched" was his passion for eggs. It was said that he ate 3 eggs per day and was able to tell where the eggs came from with precision that amazed everyone. In the communiques between King Carlos II and his traveling duke, he always added the postscript: "Wherever you are, Fernando (the duke), send eggs". The duke became increasingly frustrated by this because the king wanted to chat about everything else besides the economy and the duke's recommendations were given little attention in Madrid. It was said that every time the duke got another letter from the king, after he read it, he would run stomping around shouting "¡manda huevos, manda huevos!" frustrated by the lack of concern about real matters by the king.
Whether that is true or not is subject to debate (not really) but it does illustrate the modern day meaning of the phrase, "manda huevos", an expression that denotes a mixture of surprise at an unexpected event, or indignation and often anger. A fairly common Tico saying that is similar is "¡Qué bárbaro!" Which can mean anything from "Awesome!" to "That's insane!" or "Outrageous!"
The less colorful word historians trace this back to the even older Spanish word: "uebos". Sounds like "huevos" but it's not. "uebos" came from the Latin "opus". In old legalese, "mandat opus" was used when convincing evidence forced interpretation of the facts in only one way. "mandat opus" / "necessity obliges". Over time the words shifted: "mandat opus" => "manda uebos" => "manda güebos" => "manda huevos". And now it is used sarcastically in modern day Spanish. Quite often in a vulgar sense as well - "Send balls!"
Now aren't you glad you read this far? jajaja. ¡Manda huevos!
Those of you on Spanish social media may see this expressed as the sticker:
Technical breakdown:
FEMININE NOUN1. (= legado) bequest
2. (Latin America) (= voto) religious vow
MASCULINE NOUN1. (Biology, Cookery) egg2. (vulgar) (= testículo) ball (vulgar)
4. (Latin America)(= vago) idler ⧫ loafer
(= imbécil) idiot
(= cobarde) coward
Usage examples:
- Manda huevos que es molesta la criatura que llora y llora
Send eggs! The non-stop crying kid is annoying!
- La mujer insistía e insistía con su pedido, hasta que finalmente su marido ya harto le gritó: “manda huevos que me has cansado.
The woman insisted and insisted with her request, until finally her husband, already fed up, yelled at her: "Send me eggs! I am tired of this sh*t!"
I swear I did not make any of this up. jejeje.
--
Sam