Nouns & Articles
A1: Beginner
- Using numbers with nouns in Spanish
- Al and Del in Spanish
- Using definite articles el, la, los, las in Spanish with bodyparts and clothing (Artículo definido)
- Gender and plural of nouns ending in -e in Spanish
- Forming the plural of nouns ending in -z in Spanish
- Gender and number of nouns ending in a consonant in Spanish (except -z)
- Months in Spanish: masculine
- Days of the week in Spanish are masculine
- Forming regular masculine and feminine nouns in Spanish (singular and plural)
- Cardinal points in Spanish are masculine
- Numbers in Spanish: masculine
- Letters of the alphabet in Spanish: feminine
- Gender of living creatures in Spanish
- Letters of the alphabet in Spanish: feminine
- Using unos, unas + plural nouns to say some / a few in Spanish (Artículo indefinido -plural)
A2: Lower Intermediate
- Using unos, unas + number = about/approximately
- Gender and plural of Spanish nouns ending in -ma (Greek origin)
- Nouns that are plural in English but singular in Spanish, and vice versa (collective nouns)
- Gender and plural of Spanish nouns ending in -esa, -triz, -ina, -isa
- Gender of Spanish nouns ending in -umbre, -ión, -dad, -tad, -itis and -sis and their plural
- Using the diminutive suffix -ito, -ita, -itos and -itas with words ending in -o/-a/-io/-ia
- Using the diminutive suffix -illo, -cillo, -ecillo, -ececillo
- Spanish nouns ending in -or are masculine
- Surnames in Spanish don't turn into plurals
- Some Spanish nouns ending in -o (shortened from a feminine noun) are feminine
- Most Spanish nouns ending in -ía/-ia are feminine
- Using plural definite article + number + noun
B1: Intermediate
- Using neuter article Lo + adjective + ser in Spanish
- Presence of the Spanish definite articles el/la/los/las
- Some Spanish nouns have both genders without a change of meaning
- Gender of nouns ending in -ez/-eza in Spanish
- Using the Spanish augmentative suffixes -azo, -ote, -ón
- Using the Spanish diminutive suffix -cito, -cita, -citos and -citas with words ending in -e, -n, and -r
- Using the Spanish definite article or not with titles
- Spanish nouns ending in -aje are masculine
- Gender of nouns and adjectives ending in -ista and -crata in Spanish
- Most Spanish nouns ending in -ud are feminine