Breakdown of Según el calendario, la reunión es el lunes por la tarde.
ser
to be
el lunes
the Monday
según
according to
la reunión
the meeting
la tarde
the afternoon
por
at
el calendario
the calendar
Questions & Answers about Según el calendario, la reunión es el lunes por la tarde.
Why isn’t “lunes” capitalized?
Why is it “el lunes”? Does that mean “on Monday”? Could I say “en lunes”?
- In Spanish, el + day = “on + day”: el lunes = “on Monday.”
- For habitual events, use los + day: los lunes = “on Mondays.”
- To be extra specific, you can say este lunes (“this Monday”) or el próximo lunes (“next Monday”).
- Don’t say en lunes or a lunes for calendar days; Spanish uses the article, not a preposition.
Why is it es and not está?
Could I use future será instead of es?
Why por la tarde and not de la tarde, en la tarde, or a la tarde?
- por la tarde = “in the afternoon” (general time period). Neutral and safest across Latin America.
- de la tarde is used after a specific clock time: a las 3 de la tarde.
- en la tarde is common regionally (Caribbean, parts of Colombia/Venezuela). Understood, but not universal.
- a la tarde is Rioplatense (Argentina/Uruguay). If you want broadly neutral Spanish, stick with por la tarde.
Roughly what hours does tarde cover?
Is the word order fixed? Could I say the time before the day?
Do I need the comma after Según el calendario?
What does según do here, and why the accent?
Why does reunión have an accent, and what gender is it?
Why do we need la before reunión? Can I ever drop it?
Here it’s a specific meeting, so Spanish uses the definite article: la reunión. You can drop the article in impersonal expressions like Hay reunión el lunes (“There’s a meeting on Monday”), where you’re not referring to a specific, previously known meeting.
How do I say “every Monday afternoon” or “this Monday afternoon”?
Is junta a good synonym for reunión?
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Spanish verbs change form based on the subject, tense, and mood. Regular verbs follow predictable patterns depending on whether they end in ‑ar, ‑er, or ‑ir. For example, "hablar" (to speak) becomes "hablo" (I speak), "hablas" (you speak), and "habla" (he/she speaks) in the present tense.
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