El sábado vamos a comer en la terraza y mi padre quiere encender la parrilla.

Questions & Answers about El sábado vamos a comer en la terraza y mi padre quiere encender la parrilla.

Why is it el sábado instead of just sábado?

In Spanish, days of the week often use the definite article. El sábado can mean on Saturday.

This is very normal in Spanish:

  • El lunes trabajo = I work on Monday
  • Los sábados salimos = We go out on Saturdays

Without the article, sábado is possible in some contexts, but el sábado is the most natural form here.

Why is it vamos a comer instead of a simple future form like comeremos?

Ir a + infinitive is a very common way to talk about the near future in Spanish.

So:

Spanish speakers use this structure a lot in everyday conversation, often more than the simple future:

  • comeremos = we will eat
  • vamos a comer = we’re going to eat

Both are correct, but vamos a comer sounds especially natural for a plan.

What exactly does vamos a mean here?

Here, vamos a is part of the future construction ir a + infinitive.

It is not literally about physical movement. It does not mean we go to eat in the sense of traveling somewhere in this sentence. It means:

So the pattern is:

  • voy a comer = I’m going to eat
  • vas a comer = you’re going to eat
  • vamos a comer = we’re going to eat
Does comer here mean just to eat, or more specifically to have lunch?

It can mean either, depending on context.

In Spain, comer often refers to the main midday meal, so in many situations it can naturally mean to have lunch. But it can also simply mean to eat in a general sense.

So in this sentence, context would decide whether the idea is:

  • we’re going to eat or
  • we’re going to have lunch

Because there is also a grill involved, it may suggest a meal gathering rather than just the general act of eating.

Why is it en la terraza and not a la terraza?

Because en shows location, while a usually shows movement toward a destination.

Here the meaning is that the eating will happen there:

  • en la terraza = on the terrace / on the patio

If you said a la terraza, that would suggest movement:

So:

  • vamos a comer en la terraza = we’re going to eat on the terrace
  • vamos a la terraza = we’re going to the terrace
Why does terraza have the article la?

In Spanish, it is very common to use the definite article with places that are specific or understood from context.

So la terraza means the terrace / the patio, usually one that the speakers both know about.

English sometimes omits the article or uses a different structure, but in Spanish en terraza would not sound natural here. You normally say:

  • en la terraza
Why is it mi padre and not just padre?

Because Spanish normally uses a possessive adjective before family nouns when you mean my father, your mother, etc.

So:

  • mi padre = my father
  • tu padre = your father
  • su padre = his/her father

Just padre by itself would sound incomplete or generic here, more like father as a concept or title.

Why is it quiere?

Quiere is the third person singular present tense of querer.

The subject is mi padre, which is he, so you need:

  • yo quiero = I want
  • tú quieres = you want
  • él / ella quiere = he / she wants

That is why the sentence says:

  • mi padre quiere = my father wants
Why is the infinitive encender used after quiere?

After verbs like querer, Spanish normally uses an infinitive for the next verb.

So:

  • quiere encender = wants to light / wants to turn on

This works like English:

  • He wants to light the grill

Other examples:

  • quiero comer = I want to eat
  • queremos salir = we want to go out
What does encender mean here exactly?

Encender means to light, to switch on, or to start something that uses fire or power, depending on context.

In this sentence, with la parrilla, it means something like:

  • to light the grill
  • to get the grill going

You also see encender with:

  • encender la luz = turn on the light
  • encender una vela = light a candle
  • encender el fuego = light the fire
Is parrilla the usual word in Spain for grill?

It is understandable, but there is some nuance.

In Spanish, parrilla often refers to the grill grate or grill itself. In Spain, many speakers would also say:

  • barbacoa

So you may hear both:

  • encender la parrilla
  • encender la barbacoa

In everyday Spain Spanish, barbacoa is very common when talking about a barbecue grill or the barbecue event itself.

Why is the conjunction y used here, and not e?

Spanish normally uses y for and.

It changes to e only before words that begin with an i sound, to avoid an awkward repetition of sounds:

  • padre e hijo
  • España e Italia

Here the next word is mi, which begins with an m sound, so it stays:

  • y mi padre
Why does sábado have an accent mark?

The accent mark shows where the stress goes: SÁ-ba-do.

Without the accent, Spanish stress rules would suggest a different pronunciation. The written accent tells you the stressed syllable clearly.

This is useful because correct stress matters in Spanish pronunciation.

How is rr pronounced in parrilla?

The rr in parrilla is a strong rolled or trilled r, stronger than the single r in many other words.

So:

  • pero has a softer single r
  • perro has a strong rolled rr

In parrilla, try to make a clear trilled sound:

  • pa-RRI-lla

For a learner, even if the trill is not perfect yet, making it clearly stronger than a single r is a good goal.

AI Language TutorTry it ↗
What's the best way to learn Spanish grammar?
Spanish grammar becomes intuitive with practice. Focus on understanding the core patterns first — how sentences are structured, how verbs change form, and how words relate to each other. Our course breaks these concepts into small lessons so you can build understanding step by step.

Sign up free — start using our AI language tutor

Start learning Spanish

Master Spanish — from El sábado vamos a comer en la terraza y mi padre quiere encender la parrilla to fluency

All course content and exercises are completely free — no paywalls, no trial periods, no signup needed.

  • Infinitely deep — unlimited vocabulary and grammar
  • Fast-paced — build complex sentences from the start
  • Unforgettable — efficient spaced repetition system
  • AI tutor to answer your grammar questions