professions and nationalities

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Professions and nationalities

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In Spanish the concept of genre is very important, including things. Things can be «male» or «female». The

main concept is: if nouns or adjectives end in consonant or «o» are «masculine»; so most of them become in

«feminine» adding «a» or replacing «o» by «a»[1]. Others have both genres. Analyze and study the following

chart[2]. Click on the blue highlighted words to find out the meaning and pronunciation.

[1] Note: There are words ending in «a» and their genre is «masculine» like: papá, problema.[2] For pronunciation click on the word

masculine feminine masculine feminine

profesor profesora estudiante estudiante

español española canadiense canadiense

médico médica artista artista

cubano cubana dentista dentista

In Spanish the concept of «plural» is a little different comparing to English. Just one example: The equivalents of «My new student» and «My new students» will be in Spanish as follow: «Mi estudiante nuevo» and «Mis estudiantes nuevos».

Notice that in each word the «s» is added, while in English only the «s» is added to the noun. To change into «plural» any Spanish word the main concept is: if word ends in a «vowel» add the «s», if ends in a «consonant» add «es».

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

sueco / a (Suecia) Peter es sueco y Monique es también sueca.

nicaragüense (Nicaragua)Pablo es nicaragüense. Sofía es nicaragüense.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

danés / danesa (Dinamarca)Lewis es danés y Patricia es danesa.

alemán / alemana (Alemania) Mark es alemán y Ruth es alemana.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

japonés / japonesa (Japón) Asuka es japonesa y Chiko es japonés.

cubano / a (Cuba)José es cubano y Luisa es cubana.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

irlandés / irlandesa (Irlanda) Bakame es irlandesa y Bary es irlandés.

griego / a (Grecia) Afrodita es griega y Eros es griego.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

holandés / holandesa (Holanda) Este es el mapa holandés. Esta es la bandera holandesa.

chileno / a (Chile) Patricio es chileno. Patricia es chilena.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

finlandés / finlandesa (Finlandia) Mika es finlandés y Aina es finlandesa.

italiano / a (Italia) Amalea es italiana y Elmo es italiano.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

noruego / a (Noruega) Adam es noruego y Adolfine es noruega.

haitiano / a (Haití) Jean es haitiano y Melany es haitiana.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

peruano / a (Perú) Olga es peruana y Luis es peruano también.

mejicano / a (Méjico)Pancho es mejicano y Lupita es mejicana.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.

Nationalities[1]

Click on the pictures to practice the pronunciation

guatemalteco / a (Guatemala)Ella es guatemalteca y él es guatemalteco.

puertorriqueño / a (Puerto Rico)Ella es puertorriqueña y él es puertorriqueño.

[1] In Spanish the nouns and adjectives that refer to nationalities are written in lowercase letter.