The Everything Spanish Grammar Book: All The Rules You Need To Master Espanol (Everything®) (6 page)

BOOK: The Everything Spanish Grammar Book: All The Rules You Need To Master Espanol (Everything®)
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FACT

Even when you use a number as an adjective describing how many of something there is, the number’s ending does not change according to the gender of the noun. For example:
cuatro hijos
;
cuatro hijas
. However,
uno
and other numbers ending in
uno
do change in gender. For example:
un padre,
una madre; veintiún padres; veintiuna madre
. The same is true for hundreds:
doscientos edificios, doscientas casas.

Following 30, numbers are simply written as phrases: “thirty and one,” “thirty and two,” and so on. All you need to memorize are the numbers divisible by 10:

30
treinta
40
cuarenta
50
cincuenta
60
sesenta
70
setenta
80
ochenta
90
noventa

Here are a few examples of numbers between 30 and 99:

32
treinta y dos
45
cuarenta y cinco
51
cincuenta y uno
87
ochenta y siete
99
noventa y nueve

If you want to keep counting, the next number is
cien,
100. Then, numbers continue up to 199 with
ciento
plus the rest of the number
.
Here are a few examples:

125
ciento veinticinco
146
ciento cuarenta y seis
189
ciento ochenta y nueve

QUESTION?

When should I use
cien
and when
ciento?
Use
cien
when the number is exactly a hundred—either to say “hundred” or a hundred of something. For example:
cien mil,
a hundred thousand. If the number is a hundred and something, use
ciento.

The numbers from 200 to 999 work the same: You start with the hundreds, then add the rest of the number. For example, 348 is
trescientos cuarenta y ocho
.

200
doscientos
300
trescientos
400
cuatrocientos
500
quinientos
600
seiscientos
700
setecientos
800
ochocientos
900
novecientos

And don’t forget that when these numbers are used to count nouns, the ending can change to feminine according to rules of agreement. For example:
cuatrocientas casas
(four hundred houses).

The pattern of forming the number by going from hundreds to tens to ones continues the higher you go. For example, 1998 is
mil novecientos noventa y ocho
. Here’s the rest of the vocabulary you might need to keep counting up:

1,000
mil
2,000
dos mil
1,000,000
millón
2,000,000
dos millones

For the Nth Time

Numbers used for counting (one, two, three) or as adjectives (one book, two books, three books) are known as cardinal numbers. But there’s another group of numbers: ordinal numbers. Ordinal numbers don’t deal with quantity—they serve to indicate the order of something: first, second, third, and so on. In English, all ordinal numbers following the first three end with –th, so they are easily recognized. In Spanish, the pattern is only slightly more complicated. You’ll have to memorize the first ten:

first
primero
second
segundo
third
tercero
fourth
cuarto
fifth
quinto
sixth
sexto
seventh
séptimo
eighth
octavo
ninth
noveno
tenth
décimo

Starting with “eleventh,” Spanish switches back to cardinal numbers, so “the eleventh hour” would be translated as
la hora once
.

Practice Makes Perfect

Some of the following words need an accent mark. Add an accent mark where necessary.

1.
cantabamos

2.
dificil

3.
camarones

4.
recomendacion

5.
pontelo

6.
voluntad

Write out the following numbers:

1.
5
_______________________
2.
16
_______________________
3.
27
_______________________
4.
202
_______________________
5.
344
_______________________
6.
1998
_______________________

Add the correct ordinal number, spelled out. For example, (3)
coche
would be
el tercer coche.

1.
(4)
libro
2.
(10)
historia
_______________________
3.
(1)
comunidad
_______________________
4.
(8)
horario
_______________________
5.
(9)
número
_______________________
6.
(7)
página
_______________________

To check your answers, refer to the answer key in Appendix D.

C
HAPTER
4
About Nouns

A NOUN, OR SUSTANTIVO, is a word that refers to a person, animal, thing, or idea. Nouns can be accompanied by articles (a, an, the) and described by adjectives. A noun may be the subject of the sentence, in which case it takes on the action of the verb, or it can serve as an object or as part of a prepositional phrase.

Divided by Gender

Only a few English nouns have a particular gender: for example, you know that “sister” is feminine and “brother” is masculine. But what about a noun like “cookie”? It doesn’t have a gender.

In Spanish, noun genders work a little differently.
Hermana
is feminine and
hermano
is masculine, so nouns representing people work similarly. However, the difference is that even nouns like “cookie” have a gender (in this case,
galleta
is a feminine noun). All nouns in Spanish can be divided into two groups: feminine and masculine.

This doesn’t mean that people who speak Spanish see cookies as having particularly feminine qualities. The gender of any particular noun has nothing to do with the object itself—it’s a grammatical construction that allows nouns to agree with other parts of speech. So if you see a noun in context, you can figure out whether it’s masculine or feminine by checking the ending of its article or adjective. If these clues aren’t available, you can probably make a guess based on a few rules of thumb presented here.

Check the Ending

The clue to whether a noun is masculine or feminine can be found in its ending. The first rule of thumb is that some masculine nouns end in an –o, and many feminine nouns end in an –a.

Masculine
Feminine
el caso
(case)
la casa
(house)
el gasto
(expense)
la plata
(silver)
el techo
(roof)
la mosca
(fly)
el niño
(boy)
la niña
(girl)

One important exception to this rule: Nouns that end with –ma, like
el problema
(problem), are masculine.

ALERT

The easiest way to keep track of which nouns are masculine and which are feminine is to memorize them along with their definite article (the). As you’ll learn in the next section, masculine nouns agree with the masculine article
el
and feminine nouns with the feminine article
la.

If the rule of thumb doesn’t apply, check to see if the noun has one the following endings. If it does, the noun is most likely feminine.

–dad
la verdad
(truth)
–ión
la contemplación
(contemplation)
–tad
la libertad
(liberty)
–tud
la quietud
(quiet)
–ie
la especie
(species)
–sis
la tesis
(thesis)
–ez
la vejez
(old age)
–triz
la cicatriz
(scar)
–umbre
la certidumbre
(certainty)
BOOK: The Everything Spanish Grammar Book: All The Rules You Need To Master Espanol (Everything®)
11.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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