masculine and feminine
English does not have feminine or masculine nouns. In Spanish, it is feminine.
No. There is no gender in the English noun.
Proper nouns (like names) are generally the same in Spanish as in English. Chevy is still Chevy in Spanish.
Its said "arbol grande". which is "tree tall". in spanish nouns are said before adjectives, and in english nouns are said after adjectives. Remember, tall tree in spanish is arbol grande.
It's the adjective 'blue', for plural nouns
Same as English. Proper nouns always stay the same.
The differences stem from the fact that Spanish is fairly close to Latin and English is a Germanic language. English nouns have no gender. Spanish nouns have gender. (masc or fem eg el dia, la noche) English adjectives precede the noun (eg red wine) and Spanish follow (eg vino tinto) English adjectives don't have plural form (eg United States) and Spanish adjectives do (los Estados Unidos) English requires pronouns with verb (eg I sing) and Spanish doesn't (canto) English can form possessives by adding 's, (eg boy's bicycle) ;Spanish cannot (eg la bicicleta de la muchacho)
"My ugly love!" is an English equivalent of the Spanish phrase ¡Mi amor feo! The declaration models the tendency of Spanish to place adjectives after, not before, their nouns. The pronunciation will be "mee a-MOR FEY-o" in Uruguayan Spanish.
"noun" in spanish is "sustantivo".
The types of nouns in English are:commonpropersingularpluralpossessivecollectiveconcreteabstract
In the English language, adjectives usually come before the nouns they describe. For example, "the bold text". The word "bold" is the adjective, and it comes before the noun it is describing.In some other languages, such as Spanish, adjectives come after the nouns.
Un in Spanish is the adjective a in the sense of one in English. Una in Spanish also means a or one in English. Unlike Spanish, English adjectives do not have masculine and feminine forms:un chico guapo - a handsome lad / onehandsome laduna chica bonita - a pretty girl / onepretty girl