· abierto (open)
· activo (active)
· agradable (agreeable)
· alegre (happy)
· alto (tall, high)
· amable (friendly)
· anciano (elderly)
· antiguo (old)
· atletico (athletic)
· ausente (absent)
· autentico (authentic)
(color) naranja / anaranjado (as colour) - orange
narizón, ona - big-nosed
navideño, a - related to Christmas
negruzco, a - blackish
nuevo, a - new
neófito, a
Nepalés, esa
nórdico, a
nato, a
nÃveo, a
nublado, a
nutritivo, a
nÃtido, a
normal
nÃtrico, a
...
...
Ñoño
There's "n," and "~" that's placed over the "n". The former is pronounced as you'd expect an n to be pronounced. The latter is pronounced ny.
You would say vivo, viva, vivos or vivas. Spanish adjectives always have agree in gender and numbers. She is alive --> Está viva. He is alive --> Está vivo. They are alive --> Están vivos.
A spanish gentleman would have the title "don" used with his first name...Don Juan, Don Quijote. This works for Italian gentlemen, too.
The "squiggly line" over the n in "señor" (~) is called a tilde, a type of diacritical mark. In Spanish, the ñ is a separate letter of the Spanish alphabet, with a different pronunciation from a regular n. The Spanish ñ has a "ny" sound, while the Spanish regular n is pronounced much the same as in English.
Some adjectives that describe a shark and begin with the letter N include: - Nasty - Naughty
naval
· necessary
· nasty
· necessary
· noticeable
nice
noble
Norse
Necrophilia
nice
nonstop