Spanish words of the week: rueda or ruedo?

Time to separate out another pair of potentially confusable Spanish nouns… Join us as we set the ball rolling with ruedo (masculine) and rueda (feminine).

Starting with the feminine rueda, you can listen to its pronunciation here:

You’ll usually find four ruedas on a car, two on a bicycle and one on a unicycle, as they are the wheels that roll along the ground allowing it to move backwards or forwards. Una rueda can also be a wheel in a mechanism.

La invención de la rueda fue más importante que cualquier acontecimiento político.

The invention of the wheel was more important than any political event.

una rueda oxidada

a rusty wheel

Poco a poco la rueda hidráulica se fue aplicando a varios usos.

Gradually the water wheel started being applied to different uses.

By extension, una rueda can also refer to a tyre, the air-filled covering found on vehicle wheels:

He tenido un pinchazo lento en una rueda delantera.

I had a slow puncture in a front tyre.

Una rueda can also be a ring or circle of people or things:

Se fue formando una gran rueda de oficiales y soldados en torno al capitán.

A large circle of officers and soldiers was forming around the captain.

El alcalde ha convocado una rueda de prensa para hoy a mediodía.

The mayor has called a press conference for noon today.

Moving on to the less common ruedo (masculine), you can hear how it is pronounced here:

Un ruedo is also a ring or a circle, but in rather different contexts.

It may refer to a bullring (or an arena), the area surrounded by fencing and seating where bullfighters ply their trade:

Los toreros entran en el ruedo.

The bullfighters enter the (bull)ring.

Ruedo can be used figuratively as an arena too:

Ha vuelto al ruedo político en Argentina.

She’s returned to the political arena in Argentina.

El joven escritor se lanza al ruedo con su primer libro propiamente dicho.

The young writer is throwing himself into the ring with his first proper book.

DID YOU KNOW?

Both rueda and ruedo are related to the verb rodar, whose primary meanings are to roll and to film. Unsurprisingly, given the spelling of the related nouns, rodar is a radical changing verb, with the roots of the present indicative and present subjunctive affected:

Los automovilistas ruedan a velocidades que hacen imposible el frenazo.

The drivers travel at speeds that make braking impossible.

La mayor parte de los episodios se ruedan de noche.

Most of the episodes are filmed at night.

To see where we roll up next time we put Spanish nouns under the microscope, come back next week.

Other Articles

Spanish words of the week: tinta or tinto?

Another opportunity to look at the commonest senses of some similar-looking nouns with different endings and genders and ink in their differences. This week’s words are tinta (feminine) and tinto (masculine), and perhaps we should throw in tinte… Read More

Spanish words of the week: manto or manta?

Here we go: a chance to put to bed the differences between another pair of similar-looking but differently used Spanish nouns. This time it’s the turn of manto (masculine) and manta (feminine). Read More

Spanish words of the week: fosa or foso?

Today we’re digging into the commonest meanings of another pair of potentially confusable Spanish nouns. These are fosa (feminine) and foso (masculine). The two words have rather similar meanings in that they both refer to pit- or trench-like spaces. However, the feminine… Read More