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i'm learnin about spanish and i'm in the masculine and femine part.
when do u use the masculine and femine rule in adj's or nouns or verbs, pronouns etc and why do u use the rule in adj noun verbs etc,(which ever one it is)
P.s i only know english so this masculine and femine idea is new to me. My friend said you only use masculine but i think this is wrong.
HELP PLEZ =)

2006-11-16 10:40:54 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

2 answers

when a noun is masculine, you use a masculine adjective, when it's feminine, you use a feminine adjective. Verbs do not have a gender, you just have to conjugate them according to tense and pronoun. Hope it helps.
Good luck, Spanish is easy, much easier than English. I had to learn both, so I know.

2006-11-16 10:59:19 · answer #1 · answered by venus11224 6 · 1 0

masculine and feminine are only with nouns and adjectives.
You have to match the adjective to the noun. Usually nouns ending in o have adjectives ending in o, -a goes with -a, -os with -os and -as with -as (las casas bonitas)
verbs match the person doing the action, and don't match with gender.
Your teacher can help. Just ask to come in before or after school and he/she can explain it in about 10 minutes.

2006-11-16 19:16:23 · answer #2 · answered by frauholzer 5 · 1 0

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