Urban spanglish term for "Son of a bitch". Used by Puerto Ricans mostly from or in New York. This phrase does not come from that bullshit reggaeton song by "Hector el Father" this phrase was born way before that.
by South Brooklyn Mexirican March 8, 2018
Get the Sarabambiche mug.sababa is when everything is just so chill and good in this situation or when you just fell alright when someone asks you
1person: Hi how are you
2person: Oh I;m sababa
2person: Oh I;m sababa
by coolassghost911 December 31, 2019
Get the sababa mug.Related Words
saqaba
• sababa
• sakabatou
• saabaru
• Sakabato
• sanababish
• Saraba
• saaba
• Sabababa
• Sababalicious
Naser : Vidi onih salabajzera. (Look At those jackoffs)
Group of kids : WTF is that foreigner saying ?!
Group of kids : WTF is that foreigner saying ?!
by Sadik Begic August 10, 2007
Get the Salabajzer mug.by leah shalalala December 9, 2008
Get the sababa mug.Originally an Arabic word. Now it's used in multiple languages including Hebrew.
Means cool, awesome, good, magical or OK (positively)
Means cool, awesome, good, magical or OK (positively)
by Samlyft June 26, 2018
Get the Sababa mug.Bassa and Sababa are Israeli slang terms both originating in Arabic, and they have opposite meanings.
“Bassa” is the bad feeling you get when something annoying or disappointing happened. It’s very close in meaning to the word “bummer” in English slang.
“Sababa” means “great!”, and is also used to describe feeling great or happy, feeling “sababa”.
Both words usually describe a casual, light feeling, but can also imply a stronger feeling, depending on context.
There is a Hebrew saying “Lakahat et ha-bassa be-sababa”, which literally translates as – to take the bad stuff (the bassa) positively (with sababa). To stay positive even when bad things happen.
Netta seeks to send a message to everyone who suffers from bullying or other bad stuff – to ignore the bad stuff, pick themselves up and just carry on. Feeling “bassa”? Try to go “sababa”. Sababa is the answer.
“Bassa” is the bad feeling you get when something annoying or disappointing happened. It’s very close in meaning to the word “bummer” in English slang.
“Sababa” means “great!”, and is also used to describe feeling great or happy, feeling “sababa”.
Both words usually describe a casual, light feeling, but can also imply a stronger feeling, depending on context.
There is a Hebrew saying “Lakahat et ha-bassa be-sababa”, which literally translates as – to take the bad stuff (the bassa) positively (with sababa). To stay positive even when bad things happen.
Netta seeks to send a message to everyone who suffers from bullying or other bad stuff – to ignore the bad stuff, pick themselves up and just carry on. Feeling “bassa”? Try to go “sababa”. Sababa is the answer.
A normal day scene:
Yossi: I learned so much for this test and yet I failed it :(
Netta: Oh! bassa
scence day #2:
Yossi: Netta u won the Eurovision! How do you feel about it?
Netta: sababa
Yossi: How do you feel about the crushing loss of the Cypriot singer in front of you?
Netta: bassa sababa
Yossi: I learned so much for this test and yet I failed it :(
Netta: Oh! bassa
scence day #2:
Yossi: Netta u won the Eurovision! How do you feel about it?
Netta: sababa
Yossi: How do you feel about the crushing loss of the Cypriot singer in front of you?
Netta: bassa sababa
by Amitaytooy February 2, 2019
Get the Bassa sababa mug.by FlyingGuppie December 28, 2010
Get the Salabay mug.