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Spanish Phrase

Se reúne todos los martes.

/se reˈu.ne ˈto.ðos los ˈmaɾ.tes/
Meaning"It meets every Tuesday."
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Meaning

Literally, 'It meets every Tuesday.' In everyday speech it means that a group, club, or activity gets together on Tuesdays on a regular basis.

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When to use

Use this sentence when you want to tell someone the regular schedule of a meeting, class, club, or any recurring gathering that happens each Tuesday.

Grammar Breakdown

Sereúnetodoslosmartes

1

Se (impersonal/passive)

The pronoun 'se' can create an impersonal or passive construction, indicating that the subject is not specified or is generic.

2

reúne (present of reunirse)

Reunirse is a reflexive verb; in the third‑person singular present it becomes 'se reúne', meaning 'he/she/it meets' or 'a meeting takes place'.

3

todos los martes (frequency expression)

The phrase 'todos los + plural noun' expresses a regular, repeated action: 'every Tuesday'.

🗨In Conversation

A

¿Cuándo se reúne el club de lectura?

When does the book club meet?

Se reúne todos los martes a las siete de la tarde.

It meets every Tuesday at seven p.m.

B

Common Mistakes

  • Es reúne todos los martes.

    The verb 'reunir' is not used with 'es'; you need the reflexive form 'se reúne'.

  • Se reúne todos los marteses.

    Days of the week do not take a plural '-es' ending; use 'martes' for both singular and plural.

  • Nos reúne todos los martes.

    For first‑person plural you would say 'nos reunimos', not 'nos reúne'.

Alternatives

  • Nos vemos cada martes.

    We see each other every Tuesday.

  • La reunión es cada martes.

    The meeting is every Tuesday.

  • Se juntan todos los martes.

    They get together every Tuesday.

es

Cultural Tip

In many Spanish‑speaking countries, regular gatherings (clubs, classes, work meetings) are often announced with the impersonal 'se reúne' because it sounds neutral and professional. Remember that the day of the week is not capitalized in Spanish, and the article 'los' is required before the plural day name.