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This lesson will help you understand the
adjectives in Spanish, and enables you to use real examples shown below. If you
have any question let us know by clicking on the “Contact us” button, this
lesson is very important since it covers a very widely used element in Spanish
which is the adjective.
An adjective
(adjetivo) in Spanish or in English is a
word used to describe a noun (like size, color, shape...).
An adjective agrees in gender and number with
the noun it modifies. Similar to nouns, an adjective usually end in (~o) for masculine
(plural ~os), and (~a) for feminine
(plural ~as):
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Spanish
Adjectives
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singular
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plural
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singular
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plural
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masculine
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blanco
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blancos
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alto
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altos
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feminine
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blanca
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blancas
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alta
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altas
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-Un hombre alto (a tall
man) -Unos hombres altos (tall men) - Muchos
libros (many books)
-Una casa pequeña
(a small house) - Unas chicas peligrosas (some dangerous girls) - Muchas cosas (many things)
There are also some adjectives whose
masculine singular ends in a consonant and form the feminine by adding -a:
Un amigo frances (a French friend - male-)
Una amiga francesa (a French friend
-female-)
Some
other adjectives ending in a consonant take the same form for both masculine
and feminine:
un chico joven (a young boy)
una chica joven (a young girl)
unos cantantes populares (some popular singers)
unas canciones populares (some popular songs)
Usually
descriptive adjectives follow the nouns they modify:
una ciudad limpia (a clean city).
But
the tricky part is that Spanish adjectives are different from English
adjectives, in English adjectives are found before the noun they modify, while
in Spanish usually they're found after the
noun they modify. And also because in Spanish the adjectives agree in gender and number with the noun they
modify.
When
they precede the noun, such adjectives change meaning, acquiring a less literal
sense:
El mendigo es un hombre pobre. (A beggar
is a poor man.)
But: El pobre hombre tiene muchos
problemas (The poor guy has many problems)
See
how the position can define the meaning intended in the sentence. The first
“pobre” means someone who doesn’t have money, but the second “pobre” means
someone who deserve pity, and has nothing to do with money.
In
most cases adjectives precede the nouns they modify whenever they:
- Express an essential quality:
la dulce miel (the sweet honey)
las verdes hojas (the green leaves)
- Point out, limit
or quantify:
este perro (this dog)
su hija (his/ her daughter)
menos caliente (less hot)
tres manzanas (three apples)
Adjectives can be used as nouns, in that case they take a definite article:
Los pobres tienen muchos problemas.
(Poor people have many problems.)
Adjectives
are occasionally used adverbially:
Jose vive feliz en su granja. (Jose
lives happily in his farm.)
So
in short these are some rules to follow about the Spanish Adjectives:
Most
Spanish adjectives end in (-o), and in order to make them feminine, change the o to an (-a),
to make them plural, add -os
(plural masculine); or -as
(plural feminine).
When
the adjective ends in (-a) or (-e), no difference will be made between the
masculine and feminine form, and the plural is created by adding (–s).
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pobre ( for both masc & fem singular) - pobres ( for both masc & fem
plural)
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egoísta ( for both masc & fem singular) - egoístas ( both genders in
plural)
When
an adjective ends in any consonant except r,
or z, there will be no difference
between the masculine and feminine forms, and the plural can be created by
adding -es.
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débil (for both genders in singular) - débiles (for both genders in
plural).
When
an adjective ends with z, no
difference will be made to both genders in singular, but
in the plural we have to switch z to c and then add the usual -es.
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feliz ( for both genders) - felices ( for both genders in
plural)
When
an adjective ends in r, the feminine is
formed by adding an (-a), the masculine plural by adding -es and the feminine plural by adding -as.
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encantador ( masc singular) - encantadora (fem singular) - encantadores
(masc plural) - encantadoras (fem plural)
I
hope you benefited from this lesson (the Spanish adjectives), please check our
other lessons to take advantage of the other useful information they may
contain.
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