Algunas
"Schools" is an English equivalent of "escuelas."Specifically, the Spanish word is a feminine noun used in the plural. The feminine plural definite article is "las" ("the"). The feminine indefinite plural article is "unas" ("some").The pronunciation is "eh-SKWEH-las."
masculine = un (a/an, singular), unos (some, plural) feminine = una (a/an, singular), unas (some, plural)
Canzoni -- which means "songs" -- is an Italian equivalent of the Spanish feminine plural noun canciones. The pronunciation of the Italian feminine plural noun -- which may be preceded by the feminine plural definite (le, "the") or indefinite (delle, "some") articles -- will be "kan-TSO-nee."
Argentino (masculine), Argentina (feminine), Argentinos (plural masculine), Argentinas (plural feminine).
lección is a feminine word in Spanish, therefore its plural is las lecciones
The Spanish word "luces" is feminine. It is the plural form of "luz," which is a feminine noun.
Masculine Singular: Ese Feminine Singular: Esa Masculine Plural: Esos Feminine Plural: Esas
el (masculine singular) la (feminine singular) los (masculine plural) las (feminine plural)
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)
The plural form of "simpático" in Spanish is "simpáticos" for masculine nouns and "simpáticas" for feminine nouns.
you spell it instrucciones feminine plural
The plural of "el" in Spanish is "los" when referring to masculine nouns, and "las" when referring to feminine nouns.