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GramáticaLike in English, nouns refer to a person, place, thing, or idea. As we’ve mentioned before, nouns in Spanish have a gender. They are either masculine or feminine. For the most part, masculine
nouns end in “o” and feminine nouns end in “a.”
el libromasculine
la cuadernafeminine
“El” and “la” are singular definite articles meaning “the.” They identify the gender of the noun. “El” is the singular masculine
article, “la” is the singular feminine article. If the noun is plural, “los” is the plural masculine definite article and “las” is the plural
feminine definite article.
The gender of nouns that end in “e” or a consonant must be memorized. There are also irregular nouns, that end in “o” but are
feminine and vice versa.
el lápizla noche
la mano el día
El cuerpo – The body
los ojos eyes
la nariz nose
las orejas/los oídos ears
la boca mouth
los labios lips
los dientes teeth
la lengua tongue
los hombros - shoulders
el brazo - arm
la mano - hand
el dedo - finger
el pecho - chest
el estómago - stomach
la pierna - leg
la rodilla - knee
el pie - foot
el dedo del pie - toe
la cabeza head
el cuello neck
la espalda - back
¡Ay, caramba!To express pain in Spanish, use the phrase “me duele (body part).” Literally, it means “it pains me.” When saying what pains you, you use the definite article — instead of saying “my leg” like we would in English, we say “the leg/la pierna.” However, if the body part is plural, like legs, shoulders, etc, we use the phrase
“me duelen.”
Me duele la cabeza.
My head hurts.
Me duelen los pies.
My feet hurt.
La sala de clasesClassroom
el bolígrafopen
el cuadernonotebook
el lápiz pencil
el libro book
el pupitrestudent desk