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August 1, 2025 • 4 mins
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If mañana means both “morning” and “tomorrow,” how do you say “tomorrow morning”?

Let’s clear it up in this episode. ¡Vamos! 👇
https://latinele.com/manana-morning-or-tomorrow/

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I got this question from one of my students, Sherry.
If manyana means both tomorrow and morning, then how do
you say tomorrow morning manyana mayana? More on that on
this episode of Spanish Quiki. Are you ready for a
Quiki share? If you've been startying Spanish for a while,

(00:23):
you probably noticed how much will rely on the context
to understand the meaning of a world. That's exactly the
case with manyana, which can be a little confusing because
it means both tomorrow and morning. Let's break it down first.
Let's look at manyana meaning tomorrow. For example, me mama

(00:46):
jega mayana my mom arrives tomorrow. Here manyana comes right
after the verb jega jega manyana, and that's a very
common placement. I could also say manyana jega me mama,
same meaning, but different word order. But in both cases,

(01:08):
do you notice something. I'll repeat both sentences for you,
Me mama yega manyana, manyana jega mi mama. I'll give
you a few seconds to think of your answer. In
both cases, I just said manyana, no article, no extra word,

(01:31):
just playing manyana, and in this form it always means tomorrow.
Now let's compare that manyana to when it means morning.
Here's an example, Me mama jega por la manyana. My
mom arrives in the morning. That refers to the part
of the day. It can be the morning of any day,

(01:54):
not just tomorrow. For example, me mama jega in la
manyana the savado. In both examples, you'll notice something different.
We're using la manyana with the article la me mama
jega poor la manyana or Mi mama diega in la

(02:16):
manyana the savado. That's your clue's talking about the morning
and not just tomorrow. So let's recap manyana. No article
means tomorrow. Example, me mamma jega manyana, but la manyana
with article a feminine noun, it means morning. Me mamma

(02:40):
jega poor la manyana. So now I think you're ready
to answer. How we say tomorrow morning? Right, I'll give
you a few seconds to think of your answer. That's
it or is it? The full answer is on my
blog at Latin led dot com. Chake out the link

(03:02):
in the description and that's all for today. Grass Yes,
but it's Spanish quiki. If you enjoy the show, please
give it a first time review and recommend it to
a friend, especially that amigo that could use are good
QUICKI and hey this manyana kind of stuff. You learn

(03:22):
it by doing practice, practice practice. If you want to
start your Spanish journey with confidence, join my Spanish Beginner
Intensive Program eight weeks of guided practice to help you
have your first real conversations in espanel. Hi Marco, thank you.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
I thoroughly enjoyed this experience. It was the accountability I needed,
and learning with other people is always way more fun
than learning alone. I highly recommend the Beginner Spanish Intensive
Program to anyone interested in learning.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Chao more info at Latin led dot COM's last Spanish
intensive program, So Marco Ferro at Bronto Dotto
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