Inklingo

How to Say "molar" in Spanish

English → Spanish

muela

/MWEH-lah//ˈmwela/

nounA2anatomy/dentistry
Use 'muela' when referring to a back tooth in general, especially when describing pain or a dental issue in everyday conversation. It's the more common and less technical term.
A single, clean white human molar tooth centered on a soft blue background.

Examples

Me duele mucho esta muela cuando como dulces.

This back tooth hurts a lot when I eat sweets.

El dentista dice que tiene que sacarme la muela de juicio.

The dentist says he has to pull my wisdom tooth.

Las muelas sirven para triturar los alimentos.

Molars are used to grind down food.

Using 'the' instead of 'my'

When talking about body parts like teeth, Spanish uses 'la' (the) instead of 'mi' (my). Use a phrase like 'me duele la muela' (the molar hurts me) rather than 'mi muela duele'.

Plural for General Pain

Even if only one tooth hurts, people often say 'dolor de muelas' (plural) to refer to the general condition of a toothache.

Diente vs. Muela

Mistake:Calling a back tooth a 'diente' in a clinical setting.

Correction: While all 'muelas' are technically 'dientes', Spanish speakers are very specific. Use 'muela' for the flat teeth in the back and 'diente' for the sharp ones in the front.

molar

/mo-LAR//moˈlaɾ/

nounC1anatomy/dentistry
Use 'molar' when you need to be precise and refer to the specific anatomical type of tooth, the molar, especially in a more formal or technical dental context.
A single clean white molar tooth standing upright.

Examples

El dentista dijo que mi primer molar tiene una caries.

The dentist said my first molar has a cavity.

Los mamíferos suelen tener diferentes tipos de molares.

Mammals usually have different types of molars.

El tercer molar es lo que llamamos la muela del juicio.

The third molar is what we call the wisdom tooth.

Technical vs. Casual

While 'molar' is the correct anatomical term, in daily life, Spanish speakers almost always use the word 'muela' to refer to their back teeth.

Gender Check

Mistake:La molar me duele.

Correction: El molar me duele. (Molar is masculine, though 'muela' is feminine.)

Using 'molar' too often

Learners often default to the more technical 'molar' when 'muela' would be more natural for everyday conversation. Unless you're specifically discussing dental anatomy in a technical context, 'muela' is usually the safer and more common choice for a back tooth.

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