masculine = un (a/an, singular), unos (some, plural)
feminine = una (a/an, singular), unas (some, plural)
The indefinite articles in English are "a" and "and". In Spanish they are "un," "una," "unos," and "unas."
In Spanish class, indefinite articles were a lot easier to learn than definite articles.
In English, the indefinite articles are "a" and "an".
Indefinite articles designate a, an, or some. They do not describe a particular object. For example: the chair. the is a definite article a chair: a is an indefinite article In spanish articles must also be changed to show femininity or masculinity, as well as singular of plural. un: a (masculine and singular) unos: some (masculine and plural) una: a (feminine and singular) unas: some (feminine and plural)
Definite Articles There are four definite articles and they all mean "the" Masculine/singular :El Masculine/plural : Los Feminine/singular Feminine/plural :Las Indefinite articles There are four indefinite articles. The singular ones mean "a" and the plural ones mean "some" Masculine/ singular :Un Masculine/plural :Unos Feminine/ singular :Una Feminine/plural :Unas
definite articles and indefinite articles
definite articles and indefinite articles
indefinite articles - a, an, one definite articles - the this that those these interrogative articles - which what who
It's an indefinite article which is a type of determiner that precedes a noun. "A" and "An" are indefinite articles, and "The" is a definite article.
los artículos definite articles (the)= el, la, los, las indefinite (a, an, some)= un, una, unos, unas
First comes the SUBJECT which can be a name, noun, or a pronoun. Then comes a verb which is ser, hacer, tener etc. . Next is the Definite/Indefinite Articles. Definite Articles are El(Los)* and La(Las)*. Indefinite Articles are Un(Unos)* and Una(Unas)*.Then comes a noun. Finally, there's a adjective. (*For the def./indef. articles, I put the plural version in the parenthesees)
Indefinite articles