Language/Spanish/Grammar/Masculine-and-Feminine

From Polyglot Club WIKI
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This lesson can still be improved. EDIT IT NOW! & become VIP
Rate this lesson:
2.00
(one vote)

MASCULINE AND FEMININE IN SPANISH, WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE?

IN SPANISH THE MASCULINE (PEOPLE OR OBJECTS) USUALLY END WITH AN "O", FOR EXAMPLE: CABALLO (MALE HORSE), NIÑO or MUCHACHO (BOY, YOUNG MAN), TIO (UNCLE), TELEFONO (TELEPHONE), FOCO (LIGHT BULB), CARRO (CAR BUT ALSO COCHE AND AUTOMOVIL MEAN CAR SO, SOMETIMES ENDS DIFFERENT), SEÑOR (MISTER DOES NOT END WITH O), HOMBRE (MAN) DOES NOT END WITH O. MANY NAMES END WITH O LIKE ALEJANDRO, MARIO, FRANCISCO, OCTAVIO.

IN SPANISH THE FEMININE (PEOPLE OR OBJECTS) USUALLY END WITH AN "A", FOR EXAMPLE: YEGUA (FEMALE HORSE), NIÑA or MUCHACHA (GIRL, YOUNG GIRL), TIA (AUNT), SEÑORA (MRS., MADAME), MUJER (WOMAN) DOES NOT END WITH A. MANY NAMES END WITH A LIKE DANIELA, LAURA, MARIA, ROSA.

Videos[edit | edit source]

Spanish Grammar: Masculine vs Feminine - YouTube[edit | edit source]

Feminine Or Masculine In Spanish | Spanish In 60 Seconds - YouTube[edit | edit source]

Other Lessons[edit | edit source]

Contributors

Maintenance script


Create a new Lesson