Una libreta
The singular form of "unas capitales" is "una capital."
The singular form is: UNA VENTANA. You just have to take out the S.
Unas manos is the plural form of "una mano".
Unas clases
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
The appropriate indefinite article for the word "libretas" is "unas." In Spanish, "libretas" is a feminine plural noun, so the correct indefinite article is the plural form "unas." Therefore, you would say "unas libretas" to mean "some notebooks."
The singular form of "unas capitales" is "una capital."
The singular form is: UNA VENTANA. You just have to take out the S.
Well, darling, "una computadora" is the singular form of "unas computadoras." So, if you're looking to talk about just one computer in Spanish, you'd say "una computadora." Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
The singular of "una fotografía" is "una fotografía" itself, as it is already in singular form. In English, this translates to "a photograph." The plural form would be "unas fotografías," meaning "photographs."
masculine = un (a/an, singular), unos (some, plural) feminine = una (a/an, singular), unas (some, plural)
It's "unas fotografías."
idi
Unas manos is the plural form of "una mano".
Unas clases
An indefinite article in English is "a". The Spanish equivalents are: un (masculine singular), una (feminine singular), unos (masculine plural), and "unas" (feminine plural.)
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.