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Does hielera mean refrigerator in some parts of Mexico?Vocab questions, definitions, usage, etc |
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#4
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I don't think anyone around here would take a "hielera" for a "refrigerador".
As Rusty and Poli said, a "hielera" is an insulated box where you put ice and items you want to keep cool, like beverages, food or even some medical products. A "refrigerador" is not portable, it needs an electrical connection and it has a motor to keep things cool or cold in a house or building. In some other countries, you will hear "nevera" used as "refrigerador", although most people I know in Mexico would say a "nevera" is only a freezer (like the ones used for ice-cream), while a "refrigerador" is used to keep many kinds of food fresh, not necessarily frozen.
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#5
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Just to clarify matters, back before electric refrigerators were available, people used an insulated box to refrigerate their perishables. Regularly, an "iceman" came to deliver a large brick of ice. After the arrival of electric refrigerators, many people called their new appliances the antiquated term. icebox. I assumed, perhaps incorrectly, that hielera was used in a similar way in Spanish than icebox was (and, in some cases, still) used in English.
https://www.pamono.com/mid-century-i...146070997847&u
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#6
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Oh, interesting. Thanks, Poli.
It's not the usage in Central Mexico, but I guess it's not forbidden anywhere.
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