Tuesday, 2 October 2012

h0w t0 0rder (lemme tell y0u)

  1. Check on the product list provided in our product page.
  2. Flavor or original
  3. Select the quantity
  4. Contact us ~e-mail  ~call
  5. Wait for  reply (latest by 1 day)
  6. Order confirmation
  7. Making payment through your choice


 PAYMENT

Can be made by

  1. Face to face 
  2. Bank -in  
  • Maybank
  • Cimb

d0 y0u kn0w???


The origins of the word "chocolate" probably comes from the Classical Nahuatl word xocolātl (meaning "bitter water"), and entered the English language from Spanish.
How the word "chocolate" came into Spanish is not certain. Perhaps the most cited explanation is that "chocolate" comes from Nahuatl, the language of the Aztecs, from the word "chocolatl", which many sources derived from the Nahuatl word "xocolatl" (pronounced [ ʃoˈkolaːtɬ]) made up from the words "xococ" meaning sour or bitter, and "atl" meaning water or drink.


However, as William Bright noted the word "chocolatl" doesn't occur in central Mexican colonial sources, making this an unlikely derivation. Santamaria gives a derivation from the Yucatec Maya word "chokol" meaning hot, and the Nahuatl "atl" meaning water. More recently Dakin and Wichman derive it from another Nahuatl term, "chicolatl" from Eastern Nahuatl meaning "beaten drink". They derive this term from the word for the frothing stick, "chicoli". The word xocoatl means beverage of maize. The words "cacaua atl" mean drink of cacao. The word "xocolatl" does not appear in Molina's dictionary.