mucho (or depending on the noun: mucha, muchos, or muchas).
A lot or much.
"I read a lot."
i think you mean what is the English word mucho=much, a lot
"I read a lot."
A LOT of Spanish words end with "mente." It is an ending that makes a word an adverb. See the Related Link below.
The Spanish word "mucho" means many, or a lot. (the forms are mucho, mucha, muchos, and muchas)
It means: "that's how it is, my papano speaks a lot" (papano is not a Spanish word).
"A lot," "lots," "many" and "much" are English equivalents of the Spanish word mucho. Context makes clear which translation suits for this word that multi-tasks in Spanish as adjective, adverb or pronoun. The pronunciation will be "MOO-tcho" in Uruguayan Spanish.
You're gonna hate this, but the word is...webcam. Yes, I know, it sounds weird, but a lot of words in Spanish, especially having to do with technology, are simply the English word pronounced in Spanish...in this case, the word "webcam" would be pronounced "wayb-cahm".
Colorado is a Spanish word for the color red. There's a lot of red dirt (sandstone) in Colorado.
The spanish word for guitar is Guitarra. This English word came directly from the Spanish word, but it is not a Spanish word any more than the Spanish word is an Arabic word. "qutar" or a Greek word Chirara.
"Documento" Spanish is a Romance language, with a lot of similarities to English just like French and Portuguese. Example: ¿Tienes los documentos? Do you have the documents?