No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArts & CultureThe not so Tico origins of the Costa Rica Phrase “Pura Vida”

The not so Tico origins of the Costa Rica Phrase “Pura Vida”

A story once claimed Costa Rica’s signature catch phrase “Pura Vida” (Pure Life) is not that Tico after all. It states that a 1956 mexican movie with that same title is the origin of the popular idiom.

The film tells the adventures of a luckless man named Melquiades Ledezma, played by famous comedian Antonio Espino “Clavillazo” (1910-1993) who constantly repeated the phrase during the film.

Melquiades story begins when he is being expelled from his village for being the source of bad luck. Then his misfortunes continue in his new neighborhood, where he ends up being branded a thief and accused of provoking a fire. His bad luck ends when he gets a winning lottery ticket worth a million pesos.

“In the case of Spanish in the country, the media -especially classic Mexican cinema- have contributed greatly to a language transfer: cabrón (bastard), lana (money), maje (dude), mariachi, are some examples of migrant words that have settled in Costa Rican Spanish,” Victor Manuel Sánchez Corrales, a researcher at the University of Costa Rica, told La Nación.

“Melquiades, and he alone, uses 13 times the pluriverbal unit ‘Pura Vida’ as an attribute of people (the village’s mayor, the neighbors, and other characters), of things (earrings, food), an action (someone buys him a meal), with the meanings of ‘good’ and ‘nice'” Sánchez’s research stated.

“By the 1980s, the use of the phrase in the popular sectors of the country and the peaceful atmosphere that characterized Costa Rica as opposed to the wars and suffering that whipped the rest of Central American nations, were the reasons that prompted the socialization of Pura Vida,” he added.

Since the mid-90s, the term was incorporated into dictionaries as a Tico idiom with at least seven different uses: to say hello, goodbye, thank you, and to qualify or show admiration towards a situation, object or person.

This first appeared in 2013

Trending Now

Brazilian Tennis Sensation João Fonseca Reflects on Breakthrough Season

João Fonseca kicked off preseason training in Rio de Janeiro with eyes set on a strong start to 2026, a year that brings new...

Costa Rica’s Local Beach Economy Through the Eyes of an Expat

Change is in the air. The threatening, gray, rain-filled clouds of September and October are starting to give way to the pleasing, fluffy, white...

Latin America Poverty Falls to Record Low in 2024 but Inequality Remains Stark

Poverty in Latin America fell by 2.2 percentage points in 2024 compared to the previous year and now affects 25.5% of the population, the...

Trump Endorsement Shakes up Honduras Presidential Race

The president of the United States, Donald Trump, has gotten directly involved in Honduras’s presidential elections by openly backing right-wing businessman Nasry Asfura, just...

How To Roast a Thanksgiving Turkey With Cornbread and Pecan Stuffing in Costa Rica

If you’re spending Thanksgiving in Costa Rica, the basics of a good turkey don’t change: crisp skin, juicy meat and lots of gravy. What...

No Army in Costa Rica: How a 1948 Decision Changed Central America

On December 1, 1948, José Figueres Ferrer, President of the Founding Junta of the Second Republic, officially abolished the Costa Rican army by symbolically...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica