In Spanish, "Los" is a masculine article used before plural masculine nouns, while "Las" is used before plural feminine nouns.
The definite articles in Spanish are "el" and "la" for singular masculine and feminine nouns, and "los" and "las" for plural masculine and feminine nouns, respectively.
New Zealand in Spanish is "Nueva Zelanda." The term does not have masculine or feminine forms in Spanish as it is a proper noun.
Feminine. You can tell because "la" is the singular, feminine version of "the" ('Las' is the plural). The singular, masculine version of "the" is "el" ('Los' is the plural).
In Spanish, "shorts" is a masculine noun. It is typically used with masculine articles like "los shorts" or "unos shorts."
The plural of "el" in Spanish is "los" when referring to masculine nouns, and "las" when referring to feminine nouns.
I think it is masculine
The definite articles in Spanish are "el" and "la" for singular masculine and feminine nouns, and "los" and "las" for plural masculine and feminine nouns, respectively.
New Zealand in Spanish is "Nueva Zelanda." The term does not have masculine or feminine forms in Spanish as it is a proper noun.
Feminine. You can tell because "la" is the singular, feminine version of "the" ('Las' is the plural). The singular, masculine version of "the" is "el" ('Los' is the plural).
Feminine
its masculine no doubt
Only 'el' is masculine and singular. 'La' is singular, but feminine; the others are both plurals, masculine and feminine respectively.
feminine
masculine
Masculine
The word "universidad" is feminine in Spanish.
The. Spanish uses diffent articles depending on whether the subject is plural or singular, masculine or feminine. Los is plural mnasculine, el is singular masculine.