A spanish gentleman would have the title "don" used with his first name...Don Juan, Don Quijote. This works for Italian gentlemen, too.
duro, descriptivo, dependiente, desordenado, divertido, dantesco, despistado...
nothing
In the English language, adjectives usually come before the nouns they describe. For example, "the bold text". The word "bold" is the adjective, and it comes before the noun it is describing.In some other languages, such as Spanish, adjectives come after the nouns.
Maduro/a Remembers that adjectives always have to agree in gender and number with the noun they are describing.
Yes, they usually come after the noun they describe.
Ñoño
delicioso, delicado, deliberado
nothing
intelegente, increible
no-one
Adjectives for father that begin with H are:happyhilarioushairyhopefulhumanhumanehumoroushandsomehealthyhilarioushonesthelpfulhonorable
Kaki
· debonair
D:dangerousdauntingdefiantdependabledifficultV:verifiablevigorousvindictivevolatilevulgar
· delicious
determineddiligent
desolate
dangerousdocile