How Do You Say Tulips In Spanish? | Exact Word, Real Usage

In Spanish, tulips are “tulipanes” (singular: “tulipán”).

You see tulips on greeting cards, seed packets, and flower shop tags, then you hit the same snag: you want the Spanish word and you want to say it cleanly. No pause. No second-guessing.

Below you’ll get the spelling, stress, and grammar that Spanish speakers expect, plus phrases you can use at a market, in a garden center, or in a simple note that comes with flowers.

How Do You Say Tulips In Spanish? With Clear Pronunciation

The standard word is tulipán (one tulip) and tulipanes (more than one). The accent mark in tulipán shows the stressed syllable.

  • Los tulipanes son mis flores favoritas. (Tulips are my favorite flowers.)

The Royal Spanish Academy lists tulipán for the plant and its flower, so it’s safe for school, writing, and daily speech. RAE dictionary entry for “tulipán” confirms that standard form.

Saying Tulips In Spanish: Singular, Plural, And Gender

Tulipán is masculine, so your articles and adjectives match that.

Articles You’ll Hear Most

  • el tulipán (the tulip)
  • un tulipán (a tulip)
  • los tulipanes (the tulips)

The plural tulipanes drops the written accent because the stress pattern fits Spanish accent rules. If you want the rule in plain terms, the Academy’s page on written accents is a clean reference. RAE rules on written accent marks explains when a word needs a tilde and when it doesn’t.

Adjectives That Match Naturally

Put most adjectives after the noun:

  • un tulipán rojo (a red tulip)
  • tulipanes amarillos (yellow tulips)

When you’re naming a mixed bunch, you can keep it simple:

  • Quiero tulipanes y rosas. (I want tulips and roses.)

Pronouncing Tulipán Without Guesswork

Say the singular in four clear beats: tu-li-PÁN. The stress is on the last syllable, which is why the “a” carries an accent.

Sound Notes That Help

  • tu: like “too,” short and crisp.
  • li: like “lee,” light and quick.
  • pán: like “pahn,” with a firm “n.”

For the plural, say tu-li-PA-nes. The stress moves to pa. Many learners keep stressing the last syllable out of habit, so this switch is worth drilling once or twice.

A Fast Self-Check

  • el tu-li-PÁN
  • los tu-li-PA-nes

Where You’ll Actually Use The Word

Knowing the dictionary form is nice. Using it smoothly in the moment is better. These are the most common situations.

At A Flower Shop Or Market Stall

  • ¿Tiene tulipanes blancos? (Do you have white tulips?)
  • Quiero dos ramos de tulipanes. (I want two bouquets of tulips.)
  • ¿Cuánto cuestan los tulipanes? (How much are the tulips?)

In Gardening Talk

  • plantar tulipanes (to plant tulips)
  • bulbos de tulipán (tulip bulbs)
  • Los tulipanes florecen en primavera. (Tulips bloom in spring.)

If you like a second trusted confirmation, Cambridge lists “tulipán” as the Spanish translation for “tulip.” Cambridge English–Spanish entry for “tulip” shows the standard match.

Common Mix-Ups And Easy Fixes

Two mix-ups show up a lot: a similar word in Spanish, and the Latin genus name.

Tulipán Vs. Tulipa

For the flower you buy or grow, tulipán is the normal choice. You may run into tulipa with other meanings, like a glass lampshade shaped like a tulip. If your goal is the flower, stick with tulipán and tulipanes.

Tulipán Vs. Tulipa (Genus Name)

You might see Tulipa capitalized on labels. That’s a Latin name used in botany. In daily Spanish, people stay with tulipán.

Spanish Words That Pair Well With Tulips

Once you have the noun, the next step is pairing it with words that come up with flowers: parts of the plant, what you keep them in, and what you do with them.

Useful Vocabulary Table

Spanish Term English Meaning How It Shows Up
tulipán tulip (singular) El tulipán está abierto.
tulipanes tulips (plural) Los tulipanes están frescos.
bulbo bulb Compra bulbos de tulipán.
tallo stem Corta el tallo en diagonal.
pétalo petal Los pétalos se caen.
florero vase Ponlos en un florero limpio.
ramo bouquet Un ramo de tulipanes.
regar to water Riega poco al principio.
marchitarse to wilt Se marchitan con calor.

Ready-To-Use Sentences For Daily Spanish

Swap the color, number, or place and these lines still work. They cover buying, gifting, decorating, and simple care talk.

Buying And Gifting

  • ¿Me da diez tulipanes, por favor? (Could you give me ten tulips?)
  • Busco tulipanes para un regalo. (I’m looking for tulips for a gift.)
  • Te traje tulipanes. (I brought you tulips.)

Colors And Decorating

  • Prefiero tulipanes rosados. (I prefer pink tulips.)
  • Los tulipanes morados quedan bien en la mesa. (Purple tulips look nice on the table.)
  • Puse tulipanes en el florero. (I put tulips in the vase.)

Freshness And Care

  • Cambia el agua cada dos días. (Change the water every two days.)
  • Corta un poco los tallos antes de ponerlos en el florero. (Trim the stems before placing them in the vase.)
  • No los pongas al sol directo. (Don’t put them in direct sun.)

Table Of Handy Phrases By Situation

This table puts the phrases people reach for most into one glance, with a small tip so you can adjust on the fly.

Situation Spanish Phrase Tip
Asking availability ¿Tiene tulipanes hoy? Plural is common when shopping.
Ordering a bouquet Quiero un ramo de tulipanes. “Ramo” is common in shops.
Picking a color ¿Hay tulipanes rojos? Color adjective follows the noun.
Talking about one flower Este tulipán está bonito. Singular keeps the accent mark.
Planting bulbs Voy a plantar bulbos de tulipán. “Bulbos” is the normal term.
Price check ¿Cuánto cuestan? Point at the tulips so “cuestan” is clear.
Simple compliment Qué lindos tulipanes. Works in shops and at home.

A Two-Minute Practice Routine

If you want this to stick, do this twice and you’re done.

Step 1: Lock In The Stress Change

  • tulipán (stress at the end)
  • tulipanes (stress on “pa”)

Step 2: Use One Sentence Pattern

  • Quiero tulipanes. (I want tulips.)
  • Quiero tulipanes rojos. (I want red tulips.)
  • Quiero un tulipán rojo. (I want one red tulip.)

After a couple of rounds, the word stops feeling like a spelling test and starts feeling like normal speech.

References & Sources