In Spanish, “pear” is pera (PEH-rah), a feminine noun you’ll use with una or la in everyday speech.
You might see “pear” in a homework list, on a menu, or at the produce stand. When you know the right word, the rest gets easier: you can ask for one, describe the kind you want, and understand it when you hear it back.
This page gives you the Spanish word, how to say it, and how to use it in sentences that sound natural. You’ll get ready-to-steal phrases, clean grammar notes, and quick practice that helps the word stick.
How to Say ‘Pear’ in Spanish With Clear Pronunciation
The Spanish word for pear is pera. It’s short, common, and easy to place into lots of sentences once you know the rhythm.
Spelling And Accent Marks
Pera is spelled P-E-R-A. There’s no accent mark. In Spanish, accent marks show stress shifts on many words, yet pera follows the usual stress pattern, so it stays plain.
Pronunciation You Can Trust
A clear guide for most learners is PEH-rah. The stress lands on the first syllable: PE-ra. If you like IPA, you’ll often see it written like /ˈpe.ɾa/.
The “r” in the middle is a light tap, not a long roll. Think of the sound in the American English “butter” in quick speech. It’s one fast touch of the tongue, then you’re done.
Mini Drill For The Tap R
- Say “teh” once, then “rah” once.
- Now blend: “teh-rah.” Keep the middle quick.
- Swap the first sound to get “peh-rah.”
- Repeat five times at a steady pace.
If your “r” turns into a hard English “r,” don’t panic. Slow down, keep your lips relaxed, and let the tongue do a fast tap behind the top front teeth.
What Pera Means In Real Sentences
Knowing the word is step one. Step two is using it without hesitating. These sentence patterns show how native speakers place pera in normal talk.
At The Grocery Store
- Quiero una pera. — I want a pear.
- ¿Tiene peras? — Do you have pears?
- Estas peras están maduras. — These pears are ripe.
- Busco peras dulces. — I’m looking for sweet pears.
Notice how Spanish often drops extra words that English uses. You don’t need “some” in many cases. The noun and context do the job.
In The Kitchen
- Voy a cortar la pera. — I’m going to cut the pear.
- Me gusta el jugo de pera. — I like pear juice.
- La ensalada lleva pera y nueces. — The salad has pear and walnuts.
- Compré peras para el postre. — I bought pears for dessert.
If you cook or bake, pera shows up a lot in ingredient lists. “De pera” works like “pear” used as an adjective in English.
In Class Or At Work
- La pera es una fruta. — The pear is a fruit.
- Escribí “pera” en mi cuaderno. — I wrote “pera” in my notebook.
- La imagen muestra una pera. — The image shows a pear.
These are handy for language practice because they’re simple, clean, and easy to adapt with other foods.
Grammar Notes That Make Pera Easy To Use
Spanish nouns come with gender and number. Once you know the patterns, you can build phrases on the fly without second-guessing.
Gender: La Pera
Pera is feminine, so it pairs with feminine articles and adjectives. Use la pera for “the pear” and una pera for “a pear.”
Adjectives often change to match. If you say a pear is “ripe,” you’ll use madura (feminine) with a singular pear: una pera madura.
Plural: Peras
The plural is peras. Add -s, then match the article: las peras (the pears), unas peras (some pears).
Common Patterns You’ll Use A Lot
- Una pera + adjective: una pera verde (a green pear)
- Las peras + adjective: las peras maduras (the ripe pears)
- De pera: jugo de pera (pear juice)
- Con pera: tarta con pera (pie with pear)
If you’re used to English, “de” is the workhorse that often fills the “pear + noun” slot.
Common Phrases With Pera You’ll Hear And Use
Here are high-frequency phrases that help you order food, describe what you like, and talk about flavors. They’re short enough to memorize, yet flexible enough to reuse.
Try saying each Spanish line out loud, then read the English. Then go back and say the Spanish again at a normal pace.
| Spanish Phrase | English Meaning | When To Say It |
|---|---|---|
| Una pera, por favor | A pear, please | Buying a single pear |
| Dos peras, por favor | Two pears, please | Ordering a small amount |
| ¿Cuánto cuestan las peras? | How much are the pears? | Checking the price |
| Quiero peras maduras | I want ripe pears | Asking for fruit you can eat soon |
| Prefiero peras firmes | I prefer firm pears | Choosing pears for cooking or later |
| Me gusta la pera | I like pear | Sharing a general preference |
| No quiero pera | I don’t want pear | Declining an ingredient |
| Jugo de pera | Pear juice | Ordering or reading a menu |
| Ensalada con pera | Salad with pear | Picking a dish |
If you want a phrase that feels polite in many settings, por favor is a safe add-on. Keep it soft and friendly.
When you talk about ripeness, Spanish often uses maduro/a (ripe) and verde (not ripe yet). With pera, you’ll see madura: una pera madura.
Related Words That Pair Well With Pera
Once you can say pera, you can build more detail with a small set of add-ons. These help you talk about taste, texture, and what you plan to do with the fruit.
Useful Descriptors
- Dulce — sweet
- Jugosa — juicy (feminine singular)
- Firme — firm
- Blanda — soft (feminine singular)
- Verde — unripe / green
- Madura — ripe (feminine singular)
Put them together like this: una pera jugosa, una pera dulce, unas peras firmes. Listen for the adjective ending when it changes.
Words Around Buying And Eating
- Fruta — fruit
- Kilo — kilogram (used for produce prices)
- Precio — price
- Bolsa — bag
- Cortar — to cut
- Pelar — to peel
A simple store line you can reuse is: ¿Me da un kilo de peras? That’s “Can you give me a kilo of pears?”
Common Mix-Ups And Clean Fixes
Small slips can change what people hear. This section helps you spot the usual trouble spots and correct them fast.
Mixing Up Pera With Similar Sounds
Pera can get tangled with words that share a similar start. Two that learners bump into are perro (dog) and pero (but). They’re not close in meaning, so context saves you, yet clean pronunciation keeps things smooth.
Focus on the vowel: pe in pera is a clear “eh,” not an “oh.” Then keep the last vowel open: “ah.”
Overdoing The R Sound
Some learners roll the middle “r” for too long. In pera, the middle “r” is a tap. A long roll can sound heavy. Aim for one quick touch.
Forgetting Gender Agreement
If you say un pera, it will sound off. Use una pera. The fix is easy: connect the pair in your memory as one chunk, like it’s glued together.
| Slip | Better Version | What Changes |
|---|---|---|
| un pera | una pera | Feminine article matches the noun |
| PEE-rah | PEH-rah | Vowel shifts to Spanish “e” |
| perrrrr-a | pe-ra | Tap R instead of a long roll |
| la peras | las peras | Plural article matches plural noun |
| pera maduro | pera madura | Adjective matches feminine form |
| jugo pera | jugo de pera | “De” links the flavor to the noun |
| quiero pera | quiero una pera | Add an article for a single item |
Practice Routines That Make The Word Stick
You don’t need long study blocks to lock in pera. Short, repeatable routines work well because they build muscle memory for sound and grammar.
One-Minute Speaking Loop
- Say pera five times at a steady pace.
- Say una pera five times, keeping it as one unit.
- Say las peras five times, then dos peras five times.
- Say one full sentence twice: Quiero una pera, por favor.
If you can, record yourself once. Then listen back and check two things: the first vowel “eh,” and the quick tap “r.”
Swap-In Sentences
Pick a sentence frame and swap the last part. This builds flexibility without making you invent grammar each time.
- Quiero una ____. Try: pera, manzana, naranja.
- Me gusta el jugo de ____. Try: pera, uva, mango.
- Estas ____ están ____. Try: peras + maduras.
Once the frame feels easy, speed up a bit. You’re training flow, not perfection.
Mini Dialogues You Can Reuse
These short dialogues match situations you’ll run into: buying fruit and ordering food. Read them once, then read them again out loud. Keep your pace relaxed.
Dialogue 1: Buying Pears
A: Hola. ¿Tiene peras?
B: Sí, tenemos. ¿Cuántas quiere?
A: Dos peras, por favor. ¿Cuánto cuestan?
B: Cuestan tres dólares.
A: Perfecto. Gracias.
Dialogue 2: Ordering A Dish
A: ¿Qué recomienda?
B: La ensalada con pera está buena.
A: Genial. La quiero, por favor. Sin nueces.
B: Claro.
Notice how Spanish often uses the object pronoun la to mean “it” when the noun is clear. In the second dialogue, la points back to la ensalada.
Self-Check Before You Move On
Use this quick checklist to confirm you can say and use the word without stopping mid-sentence.
- You can say pera with an “eh” vowel.
- You tap the “r” once, without dragging it out.
- You can switch between una pera and las peras.
- You can order it politely: Una pera, por favor.
- You can name a common pairing: jugo de pera.
Next Steps To Keep Pera Ready
Use pera once a day for a week. Say it when you see fruit at home, when you write a grocery list, or when you pick a snack. Short repetition beats one long cram session.
When you’re ready, add one new fruit word and keep the same sentence frames. You’ll build a small, useful food vocabulary that feels natural in Spanish.
Write three sentences with pera tonight, then read them aloud tomorrow and again next weekend.