Authors: Julie Gutin
Aquellos chicos son interesantes. Aquéllos son interesantes.
Those guys are interesting. Those ones are interesting.
Definitely Indefinite
Another set of pronouns, which may also be used as adjectives or adverbs, are the indefinite pronouns. Indefinite pronouns are used to refer to nouns in terms of their quantity or order. Some of these pronouns only have one form; others exist only in singular or plural form but change according to gender; yet others must agree in both number and gender with the noun they modify or replace.
Most indefinite pronouns that only have one form are singular in number:
todo | everything |
algo | something |
nada | nothing |
alguien | someone |
nadie | no one |
mucho | a lot |
poco | a little |
However, there are two pronouns that are plural:
demás
(the rest) and
todos
(everybody).
Another group of indefinite pronouns indicates gender but only exists in the plural:
varios, varias | various |
ambos, ambas | both |
The rest of the indefinite pronouns are generally used as adjectives and should agree in number and gender with the noun they modify:
todo, toda, todos, todas | all |
mucho, mucha, muchos, muchas | many, much |
poco, poca, pocos, pocas | few, little |
otro, otra, otros, otras | other |
algún, alguna, algunos, algunas | some |
ningún, ninguna, ningunos, ningunas | none |
quienquier, quienquiera, quienesquiera | whoever |
cualquier, cualquiera, cualesquier, cualesquiera | whichever |
ESSENTIAL
Words like
mucho
and
poco
may be used to replace nouns (in which case they don’t need to follow rules of agreement) or as adjectives (in which case they do need to agree with the noun they modify). In English, these words have different translation depending on their use. Compare: a lot and much/many; a little and few/little.
Practice Makes Perfect
Provide the right subject pronouns in Spanish:
1. | the boys | _______________________ |
2. | you (informal) and I | _______________________ |
3. | you (formal) and I | _______________________ |
4. | Elena, Marta, Diana, y Martín | _______________________ |
5. | two of you (informal) | _______________________ |
6. | el primo | _______________________ |
Choose the right form of address
(tú, usted, vosotros, ustedes)
for each person:
1. | el profesor de matemáticas | _______________________ |
2. | tus amigos | _______________________ |
3. | tu hermana menor | _______________________ |
4. | tus abuelos | _______________________ |
5. | una mujer en la calle | _______________________ |
6. | los lectores de tu escritura | _______________________ |
Fill in the correct direct object pronoun:
1.
Tú compraste una minifalda linda.
___________________
Tú
compraste.
2.
Ellos están buscando a sus tíos.
___________________
Ellos
están buscando.
3.
Veo a ustedes desde la ventana.
___________________
veo desde la ventana.
4.
Ella encontró a nosotros en el bar.
Ella
___________________
encontró en el bar.
Fill in the correct indirect object pronoun:
1.
El doctor
___________________
tapó a Mariano las rodillas.
2.
Nuestra tía
___________________
regaló a nosotros muchos
juguetes.
3.
Nosotros
___________________
decimos a ustedes la verdad.
4.
Mi mamá
___________________
dijo a mí que debo estudiar
muy bien.
Fill in the correct possessive pronoun:
1. Los llaves de Elena son ___________________
llaves.
2.
El coche mío es
___________________
coche.
3.
Los estudios de nosotros son
___________________
estudios.
4.
El cuarto tuyo es
___________________
cuarto.
5.
El dibujo de Mario es
___________________
dibujo.
6.
Los proyectos de Antonio y Selena son
___________________
proyectos.
To check your answers, refer to the answer key in Appendix D.
C
HAPTER
6
Adjectives and
Adverbs
ADJECTIVES AND ADVERBS are parts of speech that modify (or describe) other parts of speech and don’t have meaning on their own. Adjectives modify nouns; qualifying adjectives (adjetivos calificativos) describe the noun’s qualities and traits; and determinant adjectives (adjetivos determinativos) signal the noun’s number, order, or location (determinant adjectives are identical to determinant pronouns, except in the way they are used in the sentence). Adverbs have four possible roles: an adverb may be used to modify a verb, an adjective, another adverb, or a verbal phrase.
In Agreement
Adjectives must agree with the nouns they modify. When you learn a new adjective as a vocabulary word, you’ll see it presented in the masculine/singular form. Additionally, most adjectives have a plural form, and many have feminine/singular and feminine/plural endings as well.
Frequently, an adjective’s masculine/singular form will end in –o. If such is the case, its three other forms are –a, –os, and –as. Take a look at the adjective
rojo
as an example:
cabello rojo | red hair |
chaqueta roja | red jacket |
labios rojos | red lips |
medias rojas | red socks |
Almost all other adjectives end with a consonant or –e
.
These adjectives generally don’t change to reflect gender—that is, they only have two forms: singular and plural. The plural form is constructed by adding –es to adjectives that end in consonant and –s to adjectives that end in –e:
el pasto verde | the green pasture |
la almohada verde | the green pillow |
los camiones verdes | the green trucks |
las céspedes verdes | the green lawns |
el cielo azul | the blue sky |
la pared azul | the blue wall |
los ojos azules | the blue eyes |
las velas azules | the blue candles |
Don’t forget that adding –es in the plural may necessitate a change in the use of accent marks or a spelling modification. One common change occurs with adjectives that end –z. Because sounds “ze” and “zi” almost never occur in Spanish, the spelling is modified to –ces to reflect correct pronunciation:
la información veraz | the correct information |
las informaciones veraces | (sets of) correct information |
A Few Exceptions
Although the majority of adjectives behave according to the few simple rules described here, a few exceptions do exist. Some adjectives end in –a regardless of whether they modify a feminine or a masculine noun, and therefore only have two forms. This is especially true of adjectives that end with –ista, –asta, and –ita (though not when the ending –ita is used to signal a feminine diminutive):
el pensamiento optimista | optimistic thought |
el aficionado entusiasta | enthusiastic fan |
el ambiente cosmopolita | cosmopolitan environment |
As you can see, adjectives
optimista, entusiasta,
and
cos-mopolita
end in –a even when they modify masculine nouns like
pensamiento, aficionado,
and
ambiente
. In the plural, the ending would be –as:
los pensamientos optimistas | optimistic thoughts |
los aficionados entusiastas | enthusiastic fans |
los ambientes cosmopolitas | cosmopolitan environments |
FACT
A past participle is a verb form ending in
–ado
(–AR verbs) and
–ido
(–ER and –IR verbs) used in compound tenses:
he
comprado
(I have bought),
había vendido
(I had sold). In Spanish, past participles are frequently used as adjectives:
las
cosas vendidas
(the sold things). When used as an adjective, the past participle must agree in number and gender with the noun it modifies.
Another set of adjectives make up an exception to the rule that adjectives ending with a consonant only have two forms. In fact, adjectives that end in –
dor
, –
ón
, –
ín
, and –
án
actually have four forms:
vistazo acusador | accusing glance |
mirada acusadora | accusing look |
vistazos acusadores | accusing glances |
miradas acusadoras | accusing looks |
obrero holgazán | lazy worker |
empleada holgazana | lazy employee |
obreros holgazanes | lazy workers |
empleadas holgazanas | lazy employees |