: a decorated vessel (such as of papier-mâché) filled with candies, fruits, and gifts and hung up to be broken with sticks by blindfolded persons as part of especially Latin American festivities (as at Christmas or for a birthday party)
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Examples of piñata in a Sentence
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The family makes about 20 to 30 pinatas per week, so orders filled up quickly.—Molly Morrow, Chicago Tribune, 2 Mar. 2025 Quarterback Matthew Stafford was batted around like a pinata, sacked five times behind a makeshift offensive line, where the personnel all but wore name tags to identify themselves.—Jay Paris, Forbes, 16 Sep. 2024 Crafts include making paper bag pinatas on Oct. 10 and maracas on Oct. 13, and creating paper picado art on Oct. 12.—Anne Gelhaus, The Mercury News, 8 Sep. 2024 The media treats every streamer misstep as a pinata to swing at, except for Netflix.—Mike Fleming Jr, Deadline, 3 Sep. 2024 Throw water balloons, or make water balloon pinatas.—Jennifer Wolf, Parents, 30 July 2024 Put the historical baggage onto the scales, and a Lions confetti shower in New Orleans next winter would far exceed the Chargers winning it or longtime pinatas such as the Jets, Bears, Jaguars, Cardinals and Falcons holding the trophy aloft.—Tom Krasovic, San Diego Union-Tribune, 20 Feb. 2024 Following that will be party games with an Opera San José twist, such as pinning the crown on company founder Irene Dalis and tackling a handmade pinata by local party supply store Dulceria Mi Carnaval.—Anne Gelhaus, The Mercury News, 28 Jan. 2024 As for Vivek Ramaswamy, he got knocked around like a pinata.—Nr Staff, National Review, 27 Sep. 2023
Word History
Etymology
Spanish piñata, literally, pot, from Italian pignatta, probably from pigna pine cone — more at pignoli
: a decorated container filled with candies, fruits, and gifts which is hung up to be broken open with sticks by blindfolded persons during festivities
Etymology
Spanish, literally, "pot"
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