poner a alguien como chupa de d¿mine 20
Verbal phrase that comes from the Buscón Don Pablos, novel in which Quevedo offers one of his characters, the stingy Dómine Cabra, to fall from a donkey, i.e. as chupa domine, as parsley, to stand with all kinds of insults and expletives projecting about this priest, owner of a student House, ruin more and bass of the human condition. The chupa is today a kind of Hunter leather that usually carry the bikers and like-minded people, but in the 17TH century and following was a kind of overalls or Camisole that used to be very dirty, full of stains and lamparones.