1.1 Lesson Flashcards
Learn the basic functioning of nouns, adjectives, articles, pronouns, gender, and the verb SER ("to be").
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a boy
un niño
boy - un niño (or muchacho, or chico). Note that masculine nouns usually end in -o, and use the indefinite article un.
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a girl
una niña
girl - una niña (or muchacha, or chica). Note that feminine nouns usually end in -a, and use the indefinite article una. In this case, the change from -o to -a results in a completely different word in English (from “boy” to “girl”).
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a man
un hombre
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a handsome man
un hombre guapo
handsome - guapo. Note that adjectives in Spanish usually come after the noun
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a good-looking girl
una niña guapa
good looking (female) - guapa. Note that the adjective’s gender is feminine (ending in -a) to match the gender of the noun
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a pretty girl
una niña bonita
cute/pretty - bonita
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the man
el hombre
the (masculine) - el. Note that the article must match the noun in gender. El is used for masculine nouns
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the girl
la niña
the (feminine) - la. Note that la is the article used for feminine nouns
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the woman
la mujer
woman- la mujer
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the men
los hombres
the (plural, masculine) - los. Note that the article matches the noun in gender and number. Also note that los is the plural form of the article el. Masculine plural nouns usually end in -es and -os, while female plurals end in-as
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the pretty girls
las niñas bonitas
the (plural, feminine ) - las. Note that the adjective (bonitas) matches the noun (niñas) in both number and gender
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to be
ser
to be - ser. Note that ser is an irregular verb in Spanish, and is one of the most commonly used verbs. The other way of saying “to be” is the verb estar, which we will learn more about later
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The man is handsome
El hombre es guapo
he/she/it is - es. Es is the third-person singular in the present tense of the verb ser - “to be.”
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She is an enthusiastic teacher
Ella es una maestra entusiasta
teacher - el maestro, la maestra
What is the difference between the words el and él?
- el is the definite masculine article “the”
- él is the third person singular masculine pronoun “he”
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The boy is a student
El niño es un estudiante
student - el/la estudiante. Note that estudiante is a fixed noun whose ending does not vary according to gender.
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I am a student
(Yo) soy una estudiante
I am - soy. Note that the subject pronoun yo (“I”) is optional in Spanish. It is usually preferable to say simply: “Soy una estudiante.” For masculine uses, say ‘un’ and for feminine uses, say ‘una’. But the more commonly used expression is ‘Soy estudiante’.
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I am tall
Yo soy alto
tall - alto/a
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Is he tall?
¿Es alto (él)?
Note that the pronoun (él) often comes after the adjective (alto) in a question, and is usually optional anyway
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Who am I?
¿Quién soy (yo)?
Remember that in Spanish, the pronoun (yo) can be omitted