mañana
See also: manana
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Adverb
mañana (not comparable)
- Tomorrow.
- Sometime in the future. Usually to say in a satirical sense 'sometime in the unspecified future, despite the fact that we were told tomorrow without fail'.
- The plumber said he would come tomorrow. But I think he will probably be here mañana.
- 2015 July 7, Ian Traynor and Larry Elliott, “Greece given days to agree bailout deal or face banking collapse and euro exit”, in The Guardian[[1]]:
- "[With] the Greek government it is every time 'mañana'," said Lithuania’s president, Dalia Grybauskaitė, one of the Greek government’s harshest critics. "It can always be 'mañana' every day."
Translations
tomorrow — see tomorrow
Sometime in the future
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Asturian
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin *māneāna, from Latin māne.
Adverb
mañana
Noun
mañana f (plural mañanes)
Spanish
Etymology
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From Old Spanish cras mañana or mannana, literally "tomorrow morning", from Vulgar Latin *māneāna, from Latin māne, from Proto-Indo-European *meh₂-. Compare Portuguese manhã
Pronunciation
Adverb
mañana
Noun
mañana m or f (plural mañanas)
- (feminine) the morning
- A las ocho de la mañana.
- At eight in the morning.
- Él se levanta por las mañanas.
- He gets up in the mornings.
- A las ocho de la mañana.
- (masculine) the near future; tomorrow
- En un día del mañana.
- Some day in the near future.
- En un día del mañana.
Derived terms
See also
Further reading
Categories:
- English terms borrowed from Spanish
- English terms derived from Spanish
- English lemmas
- English adverbs
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- English terms spelled with Ñ
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- Asturian terms derived from Vulgar Latin
- Asturian terms inherited from Latin
- Asturian terms derived from Latin
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- Asturian adverbs
- Asturian nouns
- Asturian feminine nouns
- Spanish terms inherited from Vulgar Latin
- Spanish terms derived from Vulgar Latin
- Spanish terms inherited from Latin
- Spanish terms derived from Latin
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- Spanish 3-syllable words
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