Spanish: An Essential Grammar

(Tuis.) #1
Uno intenta ayudarles, pero no nos lo agradecen.
One tries to help them, but they do not thank us for it.

Mucho, poco


These can be used as adjectives and pronouns (variable in number and
gender) or as adverbs (invariable).

Used as adjectives and pronouns

As an adjective or pronoun, mucho/a/os/asmeans ‘much’, ‘many’, ‘great’,
‘a lot (of)’. Poco/a/os/asmeans ‘few’, ‘little’:
Tengo pocos libros. I have few books.
Habla con mucha/poca emoción. He speaks with great/little
feeling.
Muchoand pococan also be used as invariable neuter pronouns:
Tengo mucho/poco que hacer. I have a lot/little to do.
Not infrequently mucho/aand poco/aconvey the sense of ‘too much’ and
‘too little’:
Esto es mucha/poca comida para él.
This is too much/too little food for him.

Used as adverbs

As an adverb muchomeans ‘much’, ‘a lot’. Pocomeans ‘little’, but can also
be used to negate an adjective (sometimes corresponding to the English
prefix ‘un-’):
Lee mucho. She reads a lot.
Esta tierra es poco fértil. This land is not fertile.
poco interesante/probable uninteresting/unlikely
Preceded by the indefinite article, pocomeans ‘a little’:
un poco raro a bit strange
¿Quieres un poco de pan? Do you want a little bread?

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