Where is use the?

Where is use the?

Use “the” with any noun when the meaning is specific; for example, when the noun names the only one (or one) of a kind. Adam was the first man (the only ‘first man’). New York is the largest city in the United States (only one city can be ‘the largest’). We live on the earth (the only Earth we know).

How many types of articles are there?

three articles

How many articles are in Spanish?

four

Is universidades masculine or feminine?

la universidad is feminine.

Is Cancion male or female?

“canción” es femenino* (“canción” is a feminine noun)

Is Professor masculine or feminine?

Le professeur (m) (the professor) is always masculine, even when it’s talking about your female professor/teacher! The nouns that express things without an obvious gender (e.g., objects and abstract concepts) have only one form. This form can be masculine or feminine.

How do you spell Escuela?

school noun escuela, colegio (institución); estudiantes y profesores (de una escuela); escuela (en pintura, etc.)

What is Escuela mean?

school; college; school building

Is Comunidad in Spanish feminine?

It’s a feminine noun.

Is Lapiz masculine or feminine?

Lápiz is gendered masculine in Spansh, so the definite article is el and the indefinite article is un.

Why is La Mano feminine?

Why do we say “la mano” in Spanish instead of “el mano”? Because the Spanish word “mano” comes from the Latin word “manus” (=hand), which is a fourth declension feminine noun, and which has retained its feminine gender not only in Spanish but in every Romance language.

What is a Lapiz?

lápiz. 1 (gen) pencil; [de color] crayon.

Is Dias masculine or feminine?

Día is masculine. Just as el problema is masculine.

Does Dia mean God?

Dia (Ancient Greek: Δία or Δῖα, “heavenly”, “divine” or “she who belongs to Zeus”), in ancient Greek religion and folklore, may refer to: Dia, a goddess venerated at Phlius and Sicyon. She was seen by the locals as identical to Hebe and/or Ganymeda.

Why is Dia masculine?

The Latin word for day was “dies”, from the 5th declension, and it was used mainly as a masculine word (sometimes also as feminine), and this gender was kept even though the word change to “dia” in Vulgar Latin. I checked the etymology and found that “día” comes from Latin “dies”, which happens to be masculine.

Why is Noches feminine?

Good question. That is because “noches” is a feminine plural noun, so therefore, the feminine plural adjective is needed. As for “días”, that is a masculine plural noun, so the adjective modifying it must correspond in gender and number, hence buenos. Because it’s la noche (feminine) and el día (masculine).