Puente

/ˈpwente/ noun

Definition

In Spanish culture, a long weekend created by strategically taking a day off to bridge a holiday with a weekend — the art of turning scattered days off into glorious mini-vacations.

Etymology

From Latin 'pons, pontis' (bridge). While the word literally means 'bridge' in Spanish, it gained this special cultural meaning as people began 'bridging' holidays with weekends by taking strategic days off. This cultural practice became so common that 'hacer puente' (to make a bridge) became a recognized way to maximize vacation time.

Kelly Says

Spanish speakers are GENIUSES at vacation strategy! When a holiday falls on Thursday, they don't just accept having Friday as a regular work day — they 'make a puente' by taking Friday off and creating a four-day weekend. It's such a civilized approach to work-life balance that the word itself became the concept. Why work on Friday when you could be bridging your way to a proper break?

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