comerse con patatas
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Spanish[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Literally, “to eat [something] with potatoes”.
Verb[edit]
comerse con patatas (first-person singular present me como con patatas, first-person singular preterite me comí con patatas, past participle comido con patatas)
- (transitive, Spain, colloquial, derogatory) to be stuck with (something unwanted) with no way to get rid of it
- Van a tener que comerse con patatas sus productos.
- They're going to end up stuck with their products [and no way to sell them].
- (Spain, colloquial) to find something to be very cute, "I could just eat you up"
- Qué michi más bonito. Me lo como con patatas.
- What a cute kitty-cat. I could just eat him up.
Usage notes[edit]
- The first meaning is frequently used with tener que, expressing an unpleasant obligation.
See also[edit]
Further reading[edit]
- “comerse con patatas algo”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014