Saturday, September 9, 2023

SPANISH-CHALLENGED FOLKS DON'T GET EL RRUN-RRUN

Image result for rrunrrun
(Verbo Intr.) RONRONEAR: producir una especie de ronquido, en demostraciĆ³n de contento. Murmurar. Real Academia EspaƱola

(Ed.'s Note: We have been asked by our Spanish-challenged monolingual friends where the name of our blog came from. Is El Rrun-Rrun a kind of slang or colloquial word made up in the innards of the local fire department station where the guys have nothing else to do but gab and gossip about everyone else?

Or is it a made-up word specific to South Texas, El Vallusco, or just Browntown?

No. It's really a take off on the intransitive Spanish verb ronronear, to make a sound like the purring of a cat, a motor idling, or the murmur of people talking. It's something akin to the pulse of the social body. What are people talking about? Que dice el rrun-rrun?

We were talking to some folks over at the City of Brownsville Finance Dept. yesterday and the subject came up. Do you pronounce it rrun-rrun, as in the verb different from walking, skipping, or hip-hopping down the street? Or is it (as we take it) pronounced rrun-rrun as in sand "dune" or (like our logo), a "cartoon?" We admit it. Instead of two "rrs" the word should have only one, but that is our compromise to the local readers who probably don't know the rules of the language. But we'd rather be understood than smug and grammatically correct, anyway.

We first heard the term years ago when we ran into our friend, the late firefighter Pete Avila, who was one of the major purveyors of gossip and hearsay emanating from the Central Fire Station. Pete would sidle up to us (Jerry McHale, Rey Guevara, me and other Herald ink rats) and ask: "A que no saben que dice el rrun-rrun?," meaning, "Do you know the latest gossip?"

In other words, it is a widely used term in our community and is immediately understood if one has any connection to the local lingo. If not, well, you got a ways to go...)

7 comments:

Anonymous said...




Barrio talk for Barrio worms.


Anonymous said...

September 9, 2023 at 6:10 AM

must live para el norte cagado. worms come from cockroach europe where you belong. moron

Anonymous said...

It’s a great name.

Anonymous said...

Le gustava el pedo y el olor de la cagada a Pete. He had a batting average of 7 out of 10 of the stories he told being anywhere close to the truth. Embellishment was his forte. Still, he lived to get to know the politicos and their secrets. He did not wait to verify or vet the story. Like a man starting the wave at Minute Maid Park, Pete would disseminate the info for the shear love of stirring the shit bucket. It's not gossip if you tell the facts , is it ? Pero con Pete, sometimes you hit, sometimes you miss. Rest In Peace Pedro

Anonymous said...

I don't get the double R at the beginning. Spanish words don't have a soft R at the beginning. Like chicanos who sound the V in Spanish words like the English V. They never heard the saying, B de burro o V de vaca. In Mexico they sound the same. Same goes for the S and the Z.

Anonymous said...

All you Mexicans do is WHINE...all you know how to do is make tacos and burritos...so shut-up!

Anonymous said...

gringo pendejo you eat first than you have a burrito pinche pendejo gringo.

rita