Noun and Adjective Agreement in Spanish Sample Contracts
Noun and adjective agreement in spanish worksheetsNoun and Adjective Agreement in Spanish • January 25th, 2021
Contract Type FiledJanuary 25th, 2021Learn Spanish > Spanish Lessons & Exercises > Spanish Test #29189 Twitter ShareSpanish Exercise Adjectives - Agreement created by anonymous with Test Builder. Click here to see the current statistics for this Spanish test Please log in to save your progress. End of free training to learn Spanish: Adjectives - appointmentA free Spanish exercise to learn Spanish. Other Spanish exercises on the same topic : | All our lessons and exercises First of all, an adjective is a word that describes a noun by saying a characteristic, quality, etc. about it. Adjectives in Spanish usually go by the noun, which is the opposite in English. For example: camisa roja (literally shirt red) means red shirt in English. Spanish adjectives also have several forms, since many must agree on gender (masculine, feminine) and numbers (singular, plural). Thus, adjectives ending in o can have up to four different endings (o, a, os, as), while those with other endings can only have two forms (singular and pl
Noun and adjective agreement in spanishNoun and Adjective Agreement in Spanish • August 24th, 2021
Contract Type FiledAugust 24th, 2021Articles have to agree with nouns based on the nouns' gender and number:Indefinite articles = "a" / "an" / "some". They are used to describe something indefinite or undefined. singular plural masculine un unos feminine una unasDefinite articles = "the". They are used to describe something definite and specific. singular plural masculine el (NO accent) los femine la lasIn Spanish, most words that end in -o -e or any consonant are masculine.Ex) el muchachoEx) el perfumeEx) un rumorIn Spanish, words that end in -a, -ión, or -dad are feminineEx) La muchachaEx) La naciónEx) Una comunidadSpanish adjectives follow the nouns and HAVE to also agree!Rule #1 : Spanish nouns and adjectives agree in gender (masculine vs. feminine). AGREE IT! Ex) Chico alto Ex) Chica altaRule #2: Spanish nouns are dominant, meaning they come FIRST and determine the gender and number of the adjective. AGREE IT! Ex) Garaje amarillo -"garaje" is masculine, so amarillo HAS TO agree Ex) Botella amarilla -"botella" is fem
