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Costa Rica People
Extremely friendly, full of hospitality, love to dance and jump at any
opportunity to celebrate. Family-oriented, peaceful and fun loving. Combined
with its amazing natural beauty, diverse landscape and unlimited fun, it's the
Costa Rican people and blending culture that makes Costa Rica a perfect
vacation destination.
Most Costa Ricans refer to themselves as tico or
tica (female). "Tico" comes from the locally popular usage of "tico" diminutive
suffixes (e.g., 'momentico' instead of 'momentito'). The tico ideal is that of
a very friendly, helpful, laid back, unhurried, educated and environmentally
aware people. Visitors from the United States are often referred to as gringos,
which is virtually always congenial in nature. The phrase "Pura Vida"
(literally pure life) is a motto ubiquitous in Costa Rica. It encapsulates the
pervading ideology of living in peace in a calm, unflustered manner,
appreciating a life surrounded by nature and family and friends.
Some
folk might use maje or mae (, actually maje means "dumb") to refer to each
other although this might be slightly insulting to older folk.
Costa
Rican traditions and culture tend to retain a strong degree of Spanish
influence. Their spoken accent is rather different than its Central American
counterparts.normally -ito or ita is added to many words to sound more polite
and courteous. Costa Rica boasts a varied history. Costa Rica was the point
where the Mesoamerican and South American native cultures met. The northwest of
the country, Nicoya, was the southernmost point of Nahuatl cultural influence
when the Spanish conquerors (conquistadores) came in the 16th century. The
center and southern portions of the country had Chibcha influences. However,
the indigenous people have influenced modern Costa Rican culture to a
relatively small degree, as most of the Indians died from disease and
mistreatment by the Spaniards. The Atlantic coast, meanwhile, was populated
with African slaves in the 17th and 18th centuries, although most Caribbean
Costa Ricans of African ascent descend from Jamaican workers brought in during
the 19th century to work in the construction of railways connecting the urban
populations of the Central Plateau to the port of Limón on the Caribbean
coast. During the 19th century Chinese and Italian immigrants came to the
country to work on the construction of the railroad system as well.
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