La:
playa beach
habitacion room
cocina kitchen
casa house
lecha milk
cama bed
comida food
manzana apple
In Spanish, "the" is "el" for masculine nouns and "la" for feminine nouns. In French, "the" is "le" for masculine nouns and "la" for feminine nouns. In German, "the" is "der" for masculine nouns, "die" for feminine nouns, and "das" for neuter nouns. In Italian, "the" is "il" for masculine nouns and "la" for feminine nouns.
It is 'la religión.' Most (but not all!) nouns in Spanish that end in -ión are feminine, so they use 'la.'
The plural of "la actriz" in Spanish is "las actrices." In Spanish, the definite article "la" changes to "las" for plural feminine nouns, and "actriz" becomes "actrices" to indicate more than one actress.
If it's a series of feminine nouns, it's "la séptima." If it's a series of masculine nouns, it's "el séptimo."
== == Because "El" is used for masculine nouns, while "La" is used for feminine nouns. Example of when El is used: El amigo. Example of when La is used: La amiga.
Any spanish noun that is feminine is going to have the article "la" in front of it. La puerta (the door) La casa (the house) La silla (the chair) La bandera (the flag) La mesa (the table) There are also many words that begin with "la" that are irregular. La mano (the hand) La calle (the street) La fe (the faith) La clase (the class) La nariz (the nose) La cruz (the cross) La pared (the wall) If you want an extremely extensive list of words with "la" in front of them. Google "Spanish feminine nouns" and "Spanish irregular feminine nouns". You get whole lists of them that you can look through.
"El" is the Spanish masculine singular definite article and is used with masculine singular nouns, while "la" is the Spanish feminine singular definite article and is used with feminine singular nouns. They both mean "the" in English.
el (masculine singular) la (feminine singular) los (masculine plural) las (feminine plural)
In Spanish, "el" is the masculine definite article used before masculine singular nouns, while "la" is the feminine definite article used before feminine singular nouns. These articles are used to indicate the gender of the noun.
simple answer is yes, la escuela is the school, La = is feminine The for a structure, structures tend to be permanent
nothing
"el" is the Spanish article for masculine singular nouns. Typically, "el" is translated into English as "the." Feminine singular nouns take the article "la." A noun's article contributes 95% to a person's understanding of the gender of the noun. In Spanish, nouns and their modifiers (adjectives & articles) have to agree in number and gender.