Noun-Adjective Agreement in Spanish

Gerald Erichsen is a Spanish language expert who has created Spanish lessons for ThoughtCo since 1998.

Updated on February 24, 2019

Noun-adjective agreement is one of the most fundamental aspects of Spanish grammar: Adjectives must agree with the nouns they refer to in both number and gender.

Agreement: an Essential, Basic Rule of Spanish Grammar

The rule, which has no English equivalent, is that singular nouns are accompanied by singular adjectives, and plural nouns are accompanied by plural adjectives. Masculine nouns are described or limited by masculine adjectives, and feminine nouns are described or limited by feminine adjectives.

The same rule applies to definite articles (the equivalent of "the") and indefinite articles (a class of words that in English include "a," "an," and "any"), both of which sometimes are considered types of adjectiveshttps://www.thoughtco.com/noun-adjective-agreement-3078114.

How To Modify Adjectives for Number and Gender

The "normal" form of adjectives, the form you will find listed in dictionaries, is singular and masculine. To make the adjective plural, follow one of these steps, which as the same as for making nouns plural:

Making a masculine adjective feminine is even easier. Just follow these steps:

Adjectives can come before or after nouns, or they can be used with verbs such as ser ("to be") to describe nouns. But (except for invariable adjectives) they will always match the nouns they describe in both number and gender.

Invariable Adjectives

There are a few adjectives, known as invariable adjectives, that don't change in form. Most of them are either uncommon colors or words of foreign origin. An example is web as in la página web (the web page) and las páginas web (the web pages). Sometimes a noun can be used as an invariable adjective, but this practice is much less common in Spanish than in English. Being Spanish students seldom will have the need to use invariable adjectives, but you should be aware that they exist so they don't confuse you when you see them.

Sample Sentences Demonstrating Noun-Adjective Agreement

Las familias felices se divierten en la playa rocosa. (The happy families are enjoying themselves on the rocky beach.) Felices is plural because familias is plural. The feminine form rocosa is used because playa is feminine. La and las are feminine definite articles.

El hombre feliz va a ascender al pico rocoso. (The happy man is going to climb to the rocky summit.) The singular feliz is used because there is only one man. The masculine rocoso is used because pico is masculine. El is a masculine definite article. Al is a contracted form of a plus el.

Ha sido un día largo entre muchas semanas largas. (It has been a long day among many long weeks.) The singular masculine largo is used with día because día is masculine and there is one of them, but the plural feminine largas is used with semanas because semana is feminine and there are more than one. Un and muchas are masculine and feminine indefinite articles, respectively.

Un taco es una preparación mexicana que en su forma estándar consiste en una tortilla que contiene algún alimento dentro. (A taco is a Mexican preparation that in its standard form consists of a tortilla the contains some food inside. Su is a determiner or possessive adjective that changes with number but not gender. Estándar is an invariable adjective — the same word would have been used with plural or masculine nouns.)

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