 | Luanda Local Customs | Tips 1 - 7 of 7 |  | Popular Local Customs | Other Local Customs Tips | All Tips (7) Due to its flat and open area and also to its proximity to Luanda, Viana involved itself as Angola's industrial city. I've noticed that it's terrible the traffic between Luanda and Viana. It looks like it is rush hour all day long !!! Because cars are packed on the road and quite often traffic runs in low gear, street sellers take their chance. They walk on the road between cars and show off their various products trying to catch the interest of any potential buyer.
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Interesting to see that Portuguese Products are quite popular in Luanda (and it seems that the same rule applies for all Angola in general). Portuguese beers such as Sagres, Super Bock, and Cristal definitely lead the way. Other products are also quite popular: Ramirez tuna canned fish, also Inês canned fish, Delta coffee, Mimosa milk, Compal fruit juices, some major portuguese branded wines, and also GALP gasoline stations, etc .....
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Once I got in Luanda I immediately noticed the cool Blue soda advertising billboards. This sodas' street advertising is really, really good. I found out later that Blue soda, which I tasted and found it extremely good, is produced locally, 100% Angolan, and marketed with Brazilian marketing !!! This mix (Angolan product + Brazilian marketing) turn out to be EXPLOSIVE, eheheeh ... No wonder why those outdoor billboards keep being robbed by the locals for private home decoration.
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Angola in general and Luanda in particular is an huge market on beer consumption. Quilmes - an Argentinean beer, is marketing hard in Luanda to get its own market share in this African country.
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Managed by Refriango - the same company of Blue Sodas, American Cola is produced in Angola under the license of the original American brand.
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It is customary, when you park anywhere public, to find a number of street kids running up to you, introducing themselves, and being friendly. This is the process of "hiring" a "car attendant" to "watch" your car. Usually this is ok, but it amounts to paying a bribe to encourage them not to steal things off your vehicle. Typically, 200 kwanza is good. You can be mobbed upon return, so watch your belongings, do not unlock any doors you're not using right at that moment (the mob will try your doors to see if they can get a quick theft) and walk around your car before unlocking to inspect for damage (side mirrors are stolen a lot and people will try to pry the locks off the doors with screwdrivers, so check those). If things look ok, pay the kid you met when you arrived. Leave a Comment
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The linguistic characteristics of a place are one of the most fascinating aspects. Angola is no exception. Take the original Bantu languages, and there are numerous dialects of each, and add the draping of Portuguese as the official business language, and you have quite a mix. There are six distinct national African languages: Kikongo, Kimbundo, Umbundu, Chokwe, Mbunda and Oxikuanyama. Each one of these has it's own region of domination. The most widely spoken are Umbundu and Kimbundo. Umbundo is the language of the peoples around Benguela province, and historically Kimbundo is the language in the environs of Luanda. Kimbundo, however is still spoken in the streets and in homes. In and around Luanda it is said that the younger generation does not want to learn Kimbundo. Nevertheless, Kimbundo creeps into everyday language, creating a kind of Creole version of Portuguese. Words like: camba = friend soba = chief or boss bazar = to leave or get out quickly candongueiro = human transport van quínguila = money changer zungueiro = street seller quilumba = young girl xuxa = breasts pula = white person ginguba = peanut kumbú = money cassule = youngest child These are just a few I can remember, and there are a lot more that are spoken intermixed with Portuguese. There are lots more food items that have indigenous names, especially the names of fish, as one would expect. Angolan popular music is interesting in the mixture of the native languages with Portuguese. Examples of this are the very popular "Muxima Uami", or "My Heart", in which the entire lyric, except for the repeated "Muxima Uami" is in Portuguese. Similarly, the song "Kwata Moname", or "Take Care of Your Child" uses the same idea - Mixture of African and Portuguese language to create an exotic, chacteristic Angolan groove. There are many other examples. Pardon me if I am incorrect in any of this, as I am only a hobby linguist, and I have done no real research on this subject. Leave a Comment
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