Picture a big cookout. Music is loud. Kids run by. Someone shouts, “¡Tío!” He turns, smiles, and brings the snacks. That one small word carries a lot of love. Learn it now, use it today, and watch family Spanish click into place.
The quick answer
A Mexican uncle is called tío (say it like “TEE-oh”). “My uncle” is mi tío. Easy and useful!
How to use “tío” in real life
Este es mi tío Carlos. = This is my uncle Carlos.
¡Tío, cuéntame un chiste! = Uncle, tell me a joke!
Voy con mi tío el domingo. = I’m going to my uncle’s on Sunday.
A godfather is padrino. Many kids lovingly say Nino to the padrino. He is not an uncle, but he can feel like one.
Polite ways to address older men
Don + nombre: Don Luis (very respectful)
Señor + apellido: Señor García
Mini phrase bank
¿Dónde está mi tío? = Where is my uncle?
Mi tío cocina muy rico. = My uncle cooks great food.
Quiero llamar a mi tío. = I want to call my uncle.
Common mix-ups to avoid
Accent matters: tío (uncle) has an accent on the í.
Niño (boy) ≠ Nino (what some kids call a padrino).
Quick practice (you’ll nail it)
Say it out loud: mi tío. Now add a name: mi tío Sergio. Ask a question: ¿Puedo visitar a mi tío? See? You’re already speaking family Spanish.
When “tío” says more than “uncle”
Tío can carry care and respect. It can include friends who feel like family. In Mexican homes, words build circles of love. Use tío kindly, and you’re part of the circle, too.
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