Wednesday 24 April 2024

Car Names With Unfortunate Meanings: Zica, Nova, LaPuta, Pajero, Moco

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Q24N  – As fears of the Zika virus sweep the globe, India’s automaker Tata Motors, announced Tuesday that it would rename its soon-to-be-launched hatchback, the “Zica.”

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The “Zica” will be renamed by its manufacturer

Tata says the car will debut this week at a car show in New Delhi with its original name — derived from “Zippy Car” — but a replacement will be chosen within weeks.

Tata is in good company. Here are some more cars whose names manufacturers also might have regretted.

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Chevrolet Nova

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The Chevrolet Nova. In Spanish “no va” means “doesn’t go”

The name of GM’s sedan may have sounded jaunty in English, but “no va” had an unfortunate meaning in Spanish — “doesn’t go.” Nevertheless it sold relatively well in Latin America in the 1970s.

Mitsubishi Pajero

Who wants driver a car
Who wants driver a car named a liar or a man who “pleasures himself” a lot?

In many South America countries, Pajero is a liar, unreliable or lazy person — or more disturbingly, a man who “pleasures himself” a lot. In Spanish markets, Mitsubishi’s Pajero SUV was known as the “Montero.”

Mazda LaPuta

It defines taking the whore for a ride
Want to go for my ride in my whore?

La Puta in Spanish is “whore”. The car never made it to the Latin market. The name of this boxy little hatchback may be derived from the name of an island described in Jonathan Swift’s 1726 book “Gulliver’s Travels”.

Nissan Moco

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The name of this hatchback was only used in Japan. Car-buyers in Latin America might have turned their noses up at it; there its name means “booger” or “bogey.”

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"Rico" is the crazy mind behind the Q media websites, a series of online magazines where everything is Q! In these times of new normal, stay at home. Stay safe. Stay healthy.

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