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Univext

February 26, 2025

Mastering Spanish Gender of Nouns: The Ultimate Guide

Mastering Spanish Gender of Nouns: The Ultimate Guide

Understanding Spanish Noun Genders

In Spanish, every noun has a gender - either masculine or feminine. This fundamental aspect of Spanish grammar is essential for proper communication and builds upon the basic Spanish alphabet knowledge. Understanding noun genders helps you use the correct articles and adjectives when forming sentences.

Basic Gender Rules

Most Spanish nouns follow predictable patterns for gender identification. Recognizing these patterns will help you master noun genders quickly and effectively.

Masculine Noun Endings

Ending Example
-o (book)
-ma (problem)
-or (color)

Feminine Noun Endings

Ending Example
-a (table)
-ción (song)
-dad (city)

Important

Remember that while these rules work most of the time, there are exceptions that you'll need to memorize through practice.

Articles and Gender Agreement

Just as we learned in our guide about essential Spanish phrases, using the correct articles is crucial. Spanish articles must match the gender of the noun they accompany.

Definite Articles

Gender Article Example
Masculine el (the man)
Feminine la (the woman)

Indefinite Articles

Gender Article Example
Masculine un (a dog)
Feminine una (a cat)

Common Exceptions

Some nouns break the typical gender rules, similar to how Spanish subjunctive expressions have their own special cases.

Notes

Notable exceptions include: (the hand) - feminine despite ending in -o (the day) - masculine despite ending in -a

Gender in Professions

Professional titles often change their ending to match the gender of the person they refer to, connecting to advanced Spanish communication.

Masculine Feminine

Special Gender Cases

Words with Multiple Meanings

Some words change meaning depending on their gender:

Masculine Feminine
(money) (capital city)
(order) (command)

Examples

When using (the Pope) vs (the potato), the gender completely changes the meaning of the word.

Gender with Borrowed Words

Modern Spanish includes many borrowed words from English and other languages. These words typically follow these rules:

Origin Spanish Gender Example
Technology Masculine
Sports Masculine
Art Forms Feminine

Important

When in doubt about a borrowed word's gender, using the masculine form is generally safer, as it's the default gender for new additions to Spanish vocabulary.

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