Grammar
In Spanish, adjectives come ____ the noun they describe
After
The infinitive in English is expressed by the word to before a verb. In Spanish the infinitive is expressed but the verb endings ...
Ar, er, and ir
yo, tú, usted, él/ella, nosotros, ustedes, ellos/ellas, vosotros, nosotras, vosotras
Subject pronouns
Use the word ___ to agree with someone who likes something.
Tambien
Use the word ___ to agree with someone who doesn't like something
Tampoco
most masculine adjectives end with the letter ___.
O
-es
Words that end in a consonant add:
-s
Words that end in a vowel form their plural by adding:
-ces
Words that end with a z. Drop the "z" add...
yo, tú, usted, él/ella, nosotros, ustedes, ellos/ellas, vosotros
Words used to refer to people
Estáis
Y'all are
Estás
You are
usted
formal
Adjectives that can be either masculine or feminine may end with the letters ___ or the letter___.
ista, e
estamos
we are
Most feminine adjectives end with the letter ___.
A
Está
He/she is
Estoy
I am
Tú
Informal
The two singular definite articles are ____ and ___
La, el
If you don't like either of two choices, use the word _____
Ni...ni
In order to say that something doesn't happen in Spanish, use the word ___ before the verb
No
Los
The plural version of "el"
Las
The plural version of "la"
unos
The plural version of "un"
Unas
The plural version of "una"
Están
They are
-n
To use me gusta and me encanta to talk about plural nouns, you add the letter...
Two singular indefinite articles are ___ and ___
Un, una