معنی
Working together makes a group stronger and more effective.
زمینه فرهنگی
It is the national motto of Bolivia. You can see it written on the national coat of arms and on Bolivian currency (the Boliviano). During the Spanish Transition to democracy in the 1970s, this phrase was frequently used to encourage different political parties to cooperate for a stable future. In many indigenous communities, the concept of 'tequio' (unpaid community labor) is a living example of this proverb in action. The phrase is very common in the context of labor unions (sindicatos), which have a very strong historical presence in Argentina.
Use it to motivate
This is a great phrase to use when your Spanish-speaking friends are tired or discouraged during a group task.
Check your articles
Don't forget 'la' before both nouns. Saying 'Unión hace fuerza' sounds like a broken telegram.
معنی
Working together makes a group stronger and more effective.
Use it to motivate
This is a great phrase to use when your Spanish-speaking friends are tired or discouraged during a group task.
Check your articles
Don't forget 'la' before both nouns. Saying 'Unión hace fuerza' sounds like a broken telegram.
The plural trap
Never say 'hacen'. Even if you are talking about 100 people, the word 'unión' is singular.
National Pride
If you are in Bolivia, mentioning this phrase will show a great respect for their national identity.
خودت رو بسنج
Complete the proverb with the correct words.
La _____ hace la _____.
The standard proverb uses the nouns 'unión' and 'fuerza'.
Which verb form is correct in this proverb?
La unión _____ la fuerza.
'La unión' is a singular subject, so it requires the singular verb 'hace'.
In which situation is this phrase most appropriate?
You are watching your favorite team play a match and they are passing the ball well together.
This phrase is perfect for praising teamwork in sports.
Complete the dialogue.
Ana: 'No puedo mover esta mesa sola.' Luis: 'Yo te ayudo. Recuerda que...'
Luis is offering help and using the proverb to show that two people are stronger than one.
🎉 امتیاز: /4
ابزارهای بصری یادگیری
Where to use it
Sports
- • Teams
- • Coaches
- • Fans
Work
- • Projects
- • Meetings
- • Deadlines
Community
- • Protests
- • Charity
- • Neighbors
بانک تمرین
4 تمرینهاLa _____ hace la _____.
The standard proverb uses the nouns 'unión' and 'fuerza'.
La unión _____ la fuerza.
'La unión' is a singular subject, so it requires the singular verb 'hace'.
You are watching your favorite team play a match and they are passing the ball well together.
This phrase is perfect for praising teamwork in sports.
Ana: 'No puedo mover esta mesa sola.' Luis: 'Yo te ayudo. Recuerda que...'
Luis is offering help and using the proverb to show that two people are stronger than one.
🎉 امتیاز: /4
سوالات متداول
10 سوالYes, but usually in specific contexts like teamwork, sports, or community efforts. It's not something you'd say every five minutes.
Absolutely. It's formal enough for a professional setting, especially when closing a message about a collaborative project.
In Spanish, proverbs often use 'hacer' (to make/create) to show that the result is an action or a construction. Unity *creates* the strength.
In the proverb, you must use the article 'la'. It makes the concept feel more universal and complete.
They understand it perfectly, though they might use shorter versions like 'Juntos somos más' on social media.
Not a direct one, but 'Hacer piña' (to make a pineapple) is a slang way of saying 'to stick together as a group'.
It's a bit weird. It's usually for larger groups. For couples, people might say 'Somos un gran equipo'.
'Divide y vencerás' (Divide and conquer) is the most common antonym.
Yes, the wording is identical from Spain to Argentina.
People will understand you, but it's not the standard proverb. Stick with 'fuerza'.
عبارات مرتبط
Uno para todos y todos para uno
similarOne for all and all for one.
El pueblo unido jamás será vencido
similarThe people united will never be defeated.
Juntos somos más
similarTogether we are more.
Divide y vencerás
contrastDivide and conquer.
Más vale solo que mal acompañado
contrastBetter alone than in bad company.