In Brazilian Portuguese, means “bigger than a watermelon.” Watermelons are iconic in Brazil — large, heavy, lush, and often used in rural or working-class imagery. Saying someone is “bigger than a watermelon” is not a standard idiom. It has no poetic or traditional usage.
Searching Google’s time-restricted archives (1995–2010) and Portuguese-language forums like HardMob or Fórum UOL might yield traces. However, using current search tools, the phrase is an absolute zero – no indexed mentions in comments, lyrics sites, or PDF libraries.
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