Gender, Articles & Contractions

Every noun is either masculine or feminine and the articles and adjectives used with the nouns must match the noun in gender (masculine/feminine) and in number (singular/plural).

To help you remember if a word is masculine or feminine remember to look at the end of the word and use these mnemonic devices to help you determine the gender:

There are some “Weird words” which don’t follow the “loner/diónza” pattern. There are more.

ARTICLES

MASCULINE FEMININE

DEFINITE el la

los* THE las*

*used with plural

nouns

INDEFINITE un A, AN una

unos* SOME unas*

USE OF DEFINITE ARTICLES

The definite article is used with days of the week to mean “on.”

EX: el martes = on Tuesday los viernes = on Fridays

The definite article is used when talking ABOUT someone with a title, but not when talking directly TO that person.

EX: Buenos días, señor Díaz. ¿Cómo está Ud.?

EX: La profesora Vargas no está en la escuela hoy.

The definite article is used when talking about nouns in a GENERAL sense.

EX: Cars are fast. (cars in general) = LOS carros son rápidos.

Contractions

v  There are only TWO contractions in Spanish.

v  The two contractions are REQUIRED, not optional, even in formal speech.

v  There is no apostrophe in a Spanish contraction, unlike in English.

a + el = al “A” when followed by “EL” MUST contract to form “AL”.

de + el = del “DE” when followed by “EL” MUST CONTRACT TO FORM “DEL”.

DO NOT CONTRACT DE OR A WITH ANY OTHER DEFINITE ARTICLE.

(de la, de los, de las AND a la, a los, a las)

DO NOT CONTRACT DE OR A FOLLOWED BY ÉL.

(de él and a él)

Making nouns plural

1. nouns that end in a vowel: add –s

2. nouns that end in a consonant: add –es

3. nouns that end in –z: change –z to –c and add –es

4. nouns that end with an N or S and have an accent mark on the last syllable:

Add –es and drop the accent mark

5. nouns that end in –as, -es, -is, -os: do not change; only the article is made plura