mucho

English

Etymology

From Spanish mucho

Adjective

mucho (not comparable)

  1. (often humorous) much; a great deal of
    • 1989, December 22, “Achy Obejas”, in Calendar:
      There will be calamities, maudlin melodramas, and mucho pathos at Cries & Whispers--A Tragedy Club, which seeks to reverse our town's love of comedy.

Anagrams


Polish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈmu.xɔ/

Noun

mucho f

  1. vocative singular of mucha

Spanish

Etymology

From Old Spanish mucho, from Latin multus (much, many), from the Proto-Indo-European *ml̥tos (crumbled, crumpled, past passive participle). Compare the Portuguese muito (much, many, a lot). Unrelated to English much.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈmut͡ʃo/

Adjective

mucho (feminine singular mucha, masculine plural muchos, feminine plural muchas) (superlative muchísimo)

  1. a lot of; many; much
    Tengo mucho dinero.
    I have a lot of money.
    Tengo muchas monedas.
    I have many coins.

Adverb

mucho

  1. much, a lot
  2. long, a long time

Pronoun

mucho

  1. a lot, many

See also

Further reading

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.