Lesson 12 · Lección duodécima - Lección doce
Conjugation III, mucho and muy, the verb tener in Spanish

Juana no trabaja mucho



Vocablos
| mucho [ˈmuʧo] | a lot, much, many | |
| muchos, -as | a lot of, much, many | |
| vivir | to live | |
| sus (pl. of su) | his, her, its, their; your | |
| los | padres | parents |
| tu | your | |
| el | hermano | brother |
| la | hermana | sister |
| la | calle [ˈkaʝe] | street |
| escribir | to write | |
| la | carta | letter |
| el | amigo | friend (m.) |
| la | amiga | friend (f.) |
| Varsovia | Warsaw (the capital of Poland) | |
| Londres | London | |
| Nueva York | New York | |
| llamar | to knock (at the door); to call | |
| quien | who | |
| el | calendario | calendar |
| leer | to read | |
| lunes | Monday | |
| la | costurera | seamstress |
| martes | Tuesday | |
| ver | to see | |
| el | abuelo | grandfather |
| la | abuela | grandmother |
| los | abuelos | grandparents |
| miércoles | Wednesday | |
| jueves [ˈxweβes] | Thursday | |
| todo | all | |
| todos | everyone, all | |
| el | tío | uncle |
| la | tía | aunt |
| los | tíos | aunt and uncle |
| viernes | Friday | |
| el | concierto | concert |
| sábado | Saturday | |
| ayudar | to help | |
| domingo | Sunday | |
| el | teatro | theater, theatre |
| la | comedia | comedy |
| ruborizarse | to blush, to turn red | |
| la | universidad | university |
| acercarse | to approach, to come closer | |
| el | examen | exam |
| muy | very | |
| ocupado, -a | busy | |
| estudiar | to study | |
| bien | well | |
| pero | but | |
| mi | my | |
| el | enfermo, -a | sick, ill; sick person |
| el | nieto | grandson |
| la | nieta | granddaughter |
| tener | to have | |
| este | this (m.) | |
| esta | this (f.) | |
| que | that, who, which | |
| el | muchacho | boy; young man |
| la | muchacha | girl; young woman |
| el | hijo | son |
| la | hija | daughter |
| simpático | nice, pleasant | |
| partir | to divide, to split |
Notes & Explanations
The meaning of the words mucho and muy
The word mucho is used in a sentence both as an adverb and as an adjective, and translates to English as: a lot (of), much or many.

trabaja mucho
he works a lot

come mucha carne
he eats a lot of meat

tiene muchos hijos
he has many children

tiene muchas nietas
he has many granddaughters
As an adverb, mucho usually comes after the verb and its form doesn’t change. It translates as: a lot, much, for example:
No trabajas mucho.
You don’t work a lot.
As an adjective, mucho comes before the noun and agrees with it in gender and number, for example:
muchos hijos
many sons
muchos nietos
many grandsons
muchas hijas
many daughters
The word muy (very) is a shortened form of mucho and is always used as an adverb. Muy is usually placed before an adjective, a participle, and before an adverb, for example:
muy bueno
very good
muy ocupado
very busy
muy bien
very well
| mucho + noun | = a lot of, much, many |
| mucho + verb | = a lot, much |
| muy + adjective | = very |
| muy + adverb |
Days of the Week
lunes
Monday
martes
Tuesday
miércoles
Wednesday
jueves
Thursday
viernes
Friday
sábado
Saturday
domingo
Sunday
Learn the expressions:
llaman a la puerta
they knock at the door
¿quién es?
who is it?
por la noche
at night
¿por qué?
why?
muy ocupado
very busy
muy bien
very well
el lunes
on Monday
el domingo
on Sunday
Grammar points
1. Conjugation III
Verbs that in the infinitive form end in -ir belong to the third conjugation, for example: vivir to live, escribir to write.
The present tense of Conjugation III verbs is formed from the stem of an infinitive verb with the help of the following endings:
Presente
Present tense
| partir — to divide, to split | |||||
| singular | plural | ||||
| yo parto | I divide | nosotros partimos | we divide | ||
| tú partes | you divide | vosotros partís | you divide | ||
| él | parte | he divides | ellos | parten | they divide (m.) |
| ella | she divides | ellas | they divide (f.) | ||
| Vd. | you divide | Vds. | you divide | ||
Note:
In Spanish, as was mentioned earlier, personal pronouns functioning as subjects are usually omitted, for example:
they say:
vivo en Londres I live in London
instead of:
yo vivo en Londres I live in London
Therefore, from this time on, we are going to omit the personal pronouns in conjugations. Just remember that the verbs in the 3rd person singular correspond to the pronouns él, ella, Vd.; the 1st person plural — nosotros, nosotras; the 2nd person plural — vosotros, vosotras; and the 3rd person plural — ellos, ellas, Vds.
2. The conjugation of the verb tener
The verb tener — to have belongs to irregular verbs of individual conjugation. In the present tense of the indicative mood, the verb tener conjugates as follows:
| tener — to have | ||||
| singular | plural | |||
| 1. | tengo | I have | tenemos | we have |
| 2. | tienes | you have | tenéis | you have |
| 3. | tiene | he has | tienen | they have |
3. Conjugations I, II and III summary
Presente del modo indicativo
Present tense
(Indicative mood)
| Conjugation I | ||||
| tomar — to take | ||||
| singular | plural | |||
| 1. | tomo | I take | tomamos | we take |
| 2. | tomas | you take | tomáis | you take |
| 3. | toma | he takes | toman | they take |
| Conjugation II | ||||
| comer — to eat | ||||
| singular | plural | |||
| 1. | como | I eat | comemos | we eat |
| 2. | comes | you eat | coméis | you eat |
| 3. | come | he eats | comen | they eat |
| Conjugation III | ||||
| partir — to divide, to split | ||||
| singular | plural | |||
| 1. | parto | I divide | partimos | we divide |
| 2. | partes | you divide | partís | you divide |
| 3. | parte | he divides | parten | they divide |
4. The demonstrative pronoun este
este muchacho
this boy
esta muchacha
this girl
The masculine demonstrative pronoun este this, unlike esto this ends in -e.
The demonstrative pronouns in Spanish fall into two types:
- este, esta this — pronouns-adjectives — they always come before a noun and agree with it in gender and number, for example:
este muchacho
this boy
esta muchacha
this girl
estos muchachos
these boys
estas muchachas
these girls
- este (éste), esta (ésta) this — pronouns-nouns — they are used independently (they replace a noun).Important spelling rule (RAE 2010):Example of use (the traditional variant with the accent mark is shown in brackets):
Previously, demonstrative pronouns acting as nouns were written with an accent mark (éste, ésta, éstos, éstas) to distinguish them from adjectives. However, in 2010, the Royal Spanish Academy abolished this rule. Now they are written without the accent mark (este, esta, estos, estas). You will still encounter the old spelling with the accent mark in many texts and books, so it is useful to know both variants.
Tengo dos lápices: este (éste) es negro y este (éste) es rojo.
I have two pencils: this one is black and this one is red.
Note:
The demonstrative pronoun has a gender-neutral form — esto this (always written without the accent mark), which sometimes replaces a phrase or a whole sentence.
¿Qué es esto?
What is this?
Esto son lápices.
These are pencils.
Remember the differences between these words:
esta — this (adjective)
ésta — this (traditional spelling for pronoun-noun)
For example:
Esta lámpara está sobre la mesa y esta (ésta) también.
This lamp is on the table and this one too.
Exercises
I. Answer the following questions:
¿Dónde vive Juana? ¿Qué escribe Juana? ¿Dónde va Juana el lunes? ¿Por qué van todos a casa de la tía el jueves? ¿Quién llama a la puerta? ¿Quién es María? ¿Quién es José? ¿Dónde estudia José? ¿Quién ayuda a José? ¿Cuántos nietos tienen los abuelos de Juana?

II. Translate into English:
Hoy es domingo, no trabajamos, nos levantamos temprano, tomamos el desayuno y vamos a pasear. Después voy a casa de mi abuelo y mi hermano José va al cine con mi amiga María. María me gusta, es una buena muchacha. Trabaja mucho, estudia y ayuda en casa. La madre de María es costurera. María tiene dos hermanos. Yo tengo un hermano y una hermana. El lunes María y yo vamos al cine con Juan y José y el miércoles vamos todos al teatro. El sábado vamos a casa de mi tía. En casa de mi tía como siempre muy bien, hay carne buena y vino blanco.

III. Translate into Spanish:
I live in New York. My boyfriend also lives in New York. Juan’s friend is in Madrid. Juan writes a letter. I read a book, my grandmother talks with my mother. My father works, he is not at home. On Sunday, Juan and I are going to the aunt’s. The uncle is at grandmother’s. I like going to my aunt’s. She has good wine at home. It’s Saturday. Dad is at the factory, he comes back at half past four. At four o’clock, I go to the restaurant. I like going to the restaurant on Sunday because on Sunday the food in the restaurant is good. Today is Tuesday. I write a letter to my friend. She is in Madrid. My sister and I always answer the letters. My brother doesn’t answer because he is very busy. He is at the uncle’s, where he studies.

IV. Fill in the blanks with the words: esto, este, esta, está or estos, estas. (For pronouns-nouns, you may use the traditional spelling with an accent mark: éste, ésta, éstos, éstas).
es mi libro. Mi libro sobre la mesa. libro es blanco. mesa es amarilla y es negra. libros están sobre la mesa amarilla y están sobre la silla. mesas son amarillas.

V. Translate the sentences into Spanish. Use mucho or muy for the words in bold.
Jose studies a lot. He has many books. This seamstress works very well. They have many pens. We have many pencils.
