love this video ! but i have a question... i saw that some feminine words with a stressed a of ha doesn't have a feminine article. i dont get what a stressed a or ha is, can you explain?
Yes, absolutely! so yes, basically words that start with a stress 'a' such as agua, azúcar, águila, aula, etc will have the article in the singular masculine form because otherwise it's really hard to pronounce. so we say el agua, el águila, el aula. But they are femenino, so if you have a adjective such as 'blanco' (white) then you have to put those in the plural they take the femenino plural form las aguas, las águilas, las aulas. I hope this explanation makes sense. Muchas gracias por preguntar!
¡Correcto! but doesn't mean that the gender of the word is changed, it's just the article that changes, for example: el agua, el águila, el azúcar, el hacha, etc. but if you had it in the plural form or an adjective they're still femenino words, for example: el agua cristalina, las hachas son peligrosas, necesitas azúcar negra, etc. ¿Tiene sentido? Does that make sense? I hope it does
¡LA clase importante! Muchas gracias 😄
Mucha Gracias
Muchas gracias. Señora
¡Gracias a ti por ver la clase!
Bloop
Muchas Gracias 🌹🌷🌺
¡Excelente! 💝
@@HolaSpanish 🌹🌷🌺
love this video ! but i have a question... i saw that some feminine words with a stressed a of ha doesn't have a feminine article. i dont get what a stressed a or ha is, can you explain?
Yes, absolutely! so yes, basically words that start with a stress 'a' such as agua, azúcar, águila, aula, etc will have the article in the singular masculine form because otherwise it's really hard to pronounce. so we say el agua, el águila, el aula. But they are femenino, so if you have a adjective such as 'blanco' (white) then you have to put those in the plural they take the femenino plural form las aguas, las águilas, las aulas. I hope this explanation makes sense. Muchas gracias por preguntar!
Hay más??? O esa es una lista completa?
great work
¡Gracias por tu comentario!
The words ending with -ma, -pa, -ta are from Greek, so that's why there are exceptions.
estas explicando muy bien
How could I indentify these words with exceptions
Gracias
¡Gracias a ti por ver la clase!
i love the ways u teach u r awosme mam
¡Muchas gracias! That's very nice! You made my day! Thank you Harsh! ♥
heyyyyyyybestiee
Probablemente ya sabes eso, pero en inglés no decimos "exceptions of the rule" sino "exceptions to the rule".
Love from India
ROYAL SOCH TH-cam
¡Muchas gracias Varun!
12
❤
💝
Feminine nouns that begin with a stressed "a-" or "ha-" sound in Spanish use the articles "el" and “un” in the singular.
¡Correcto! but doesn't mean that the gender of the word is changed, it's just the article that changes, for example: el agua, el águila, el azúcar, el hacha, etc. but if you had it in the plural form or an adjective they're still femenino words, for example: el agua cristalina, las hachas son peligrosas, necesitas azúcar negra, etc. ¿Tiene sentido? Does that make sense? I hope it does
Why it's feminino...la miel la sal and la piel..this all ending with l as per rule this all are mascilino..
Also la col.
not always amollll
¡Lo siento! No entiendo qué quieres decir ¿Me lo puedes repetir con más claridad por favor? Con gusto me gustaría clarificar tu duda
it's difficult to me
-
Pd: I am from Colombia 😹😹 it's a joke!!
El sofa ?
I wish I could travel back in time and be her husband instead lol ,;)
jajaja gracias por compartirlo 💟
Muchas gracias