Oportunidad is a feminine noun. Why was it marked wrong when I wrote grande? The correction was to gran.
Grande oportunidad vs gran oportunidad
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Grande oportunidad vs gran oportunidad
Hi Alice,
If you wanted to describe 'a big opportunity' then you would use the adjective 'grande':
Una oportunidad grande. Grande meaning 'big'.
If however you wanted to describe 'a great opportunity' you would use the adjective 'gran':
Una gran oportunidad. Gran meaning 'great'.
Gran:
- Placed before a noun means 'great', 'fantastic'. It's more about describing the qualities of a person or thing.
Grande:
-Placed after a noun refers to size or age meaning big, large, old or grown-up.
Oh and 'gran' can go before both a masculine and feminine noun.
I hope this helps a little.
My Grammar book (by Butt and Benjamin) confirms what Clara says - but in the context that, when it means 'big', 'grande' is restricting or differentiating the noun so it needs to follow it [as explained in the Kwiziq lesson on noun/adjective ordering]. And when it precedes the noun [here, translated as a 'great opportunity'; i.e., one which is very welcome] then it gets truncated to 'gran', even when feminine [but remains 'grandes' in the plural; i.e. 'great opportunities' would be 'grandes oportunidades'].
Hola Alice
The moment the adjective is placed in front of the noun (masculine or feminine singular nouns) we need the shortened version of it: "gran"
The test questions shows as:
Me han dado una ___ oportunidad en el trabajo. (I have been given a great opportunity at work.)
So, as the noun is placed after the gap the only possible answer is "gran", not "grande".
Un saludo cordial
Inma
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