Choco

Chocó may refer to:

  • Chocó Department, Colombian administrative region
  • El Chocó - a name for Tumbes-Chocó-Magdalena, Pacific coastal region, extending through Panama, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru
  • Choco languages, family of Native American languages, in Colombia and Panama
  • Chocó people, former name of the Embera-Wounaan, a group of semi-nomadic Indians in Panama
  • Guilherme Choco, Brazilian footballer
  • Choco may also be an alternative name for:

  • A shortening of "chocolate" in Hungarian and Japanese (in transcriptions into English)
  • A shortening of the phrase "chocolate soldier", a derogatory name for soldiers of the Australian Army Reserve
  • Chayote, edible plant
  • Chocobo, fictional bird, in various Square Enix Final Fantasy games
  • Mark Williams (Australian footballer born 1958), former coach of the Port Adelaide Football Club
  • Someone from the Mexican state of Tabasco
  • Choco(late) Australian (Sydney notably) racist slang for a person of non-caucasian ethnicity, aka wog. Considered derogatory and offensive.
  • See also

    Chocó Department

    Chocó is a department of Colombia known for its large Afro-Colombian population. It is in the west of the country, and is the only Colombian department to have coastlines on both the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean. It also has all of Colombia's border with Panama. Its capital is Quibdó.

    Chocó has a diverse geography, unique ecosystems and unexploited natural resources. However, its population has one of the lowest standards of living of all Departments in Colombia. In March 2007 Colombian media reported that some 50 children starved in less than three months, creating awareness of the grave condition Chocó inhabitants are facing. Infrastructure problems were also revealed. For example, despite its status as the world's rainiest lowland, with close to 400 inches of annual precipitation, Chocó's capital Quibdó was left without drinking water.

    History

    The Department was created in 1944 being speaker at House of Representatives Pedro Yances Salcedo, but it was never legally established. Due to its low population, inhospitable topography, and distance from Bogotá, Chocó has received little attention from the Colombian government. During the government of military dictator Gustavo Rojas Pinilla Chocó was to be eliminated as a department and divided between Antioquia department and Valle del Cauca department, but Pinilla's intentions were thwarted by the 1957 coup d'état of General Gabriel París Gordillo.

    Podcasts:

    チョコ

    Choco

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