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Masculine Singular: Ese Feminine Singular: Esa Masculine Plural: Esos Feminine Plural: Esas
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.
"Finger" is an English equivalent of the Spanish word dedo.Specifically, the Spanish word is a masculine noun. It may be preceded by the masculine singular definite article el("the") or the masculine singular indefinite article un, uno ("a, one"). The pronunciation will be "DEY-thoh" in Spanish.
Junto ~ Masculine, singular Junta ~ Femenine, singular Juntos ~ Masculine, plural Juntas ~ Femenine, plural
"Dogfish" is an English equivalent of "escualo."Specifically, the Spanish word is a masculine noun. Its masculine singular definite article is "el" ("the"). Its masculine singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "eh-SKWAH-loh."
"El rey" is a Spanish equivalent of "the king."The masculine singular definite article "el" means "the." The masculine singular noun "rey" means "king." Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "ehl reh."
An indefinite article in English is "a". The Spanish equivalents are: un (masculine singular), una (feminine singular), unos (masculine plural), and "unas" (feminine plural.)
Only 'el' is masculine and singular. 'La' is singular, but feminine; the others are both plurals, masculine and feminine respectively.
"El rey" is a Spanish equivalent of "the king."The masculine singular definite article "el" means "the." The masculine singular noun "rey" means "king." Its singular indefinite article is "un" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "ehl reh."
Hay mucho -masculine singular Hay mucha -feminine singular Hay muchos -masculine plural Hay muchas -feminine plural
Éxito is a Spanish equivalent of the English word "success." The masculine singular noun may be preceded immediately by the masculine singular el since Spanish employs definite articles where English does not use "the." The pronunciation will be "EK-see-to" in Uruguayan Spanish.
Hello. Yellow in Spanish is Amarillo, however this changes if their is a feminine or masculine word in front or behind.