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Why is it ok to use el with a feminine noun?This is the place for questions about conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax and other grammar questions for English or Spanish. |
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#1
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Why is it ok to use el with a feminine noun?
Why is it o-kay to use el with the feminine noun aula? I can understand el programa because it is a masculine noun even though it ends in a (and also ma coincidentally). I have just realized that this is my favorite forum. I love Spanish Grammar!
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#2
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El is used with feminine nouns which begin with a stressed a. "El agua" is probably the most commonly used example. For an example where the stress has to be indicated with an accent, consider el águila.
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#3
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This is akin to why we have two pronunciations for the word 'the' in English. If the following word begins with a vowel sound, we pronounce it as if it were written 'thee'. Likewise, the English word 'a' becomes 'an' if the following word begins with a vowel sound. In Spanish, the rule is 'if the immediately following feminine word begins with a stressed 'a' sound, the singular definite article 'el' and the singular indefinite article 'un' are used. The feminine plural articles are used, however.
el/un agua las/unas aguas el/un águila las/unas águilas el/un hacha las/unas hachas An extension of the rule states that compound words that begin with any of the words that fall under this category are also treated the same way, even though the 'a' sound is not stressed. el/un avemaría el/un aguamarina There are words that are excluded from the rule - all proper names, names that denote a female person or animal, and letters of the alphabet. la a la hache la Ana La Haya la árabe (a female Arab, as opposed to el árabe (a male Arab)) la ánade |
#4
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I read a rule recently that all compound nouns require the masculine definite and indefinite articles. I was thinking of el abrelatas and el paraguas when I read the rule. But your examples of el/un avemaría and el/un aguamarina clear up any confusion about "a" words that I may have in the future. Your list of exceptions-to-the-rule are interesting because I have memorized some of them already. But now, I know why they are the way they are! Very nice, you've made my day. Last edited by Rusty; September 09, 2010 at 08:21 PM. Reason: merged back-to-back posts |
#5
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Not all compound nouns are masculine nouns, they can be feminine. Usually, compound nouns with a verb in them are masculine ("el abrelatas", "el girasol", "el quitamanchas", etc.), but there are feminine ones, too: "la aguzanieves", "la cortapisa", etc.
There is a rule not respected (so, I'm not sure that it is a rule ) that the last noun gives the gender to the compound noun, so "el mediodía" would be affected by the masculine noun of "día" (el día). So, we have the following feminine nouns: "aguamarina", "avemaría", "telaraña", "aguanieve", "bocamanga", etc. However, there are much more masculine compound nouns than feminine ones. |
#6
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Please rewrite correctly and copy 100 times.
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#7
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el ave maría, el avemaría, la avemaría
la aguamarina el ave / las aves un ave / unas aves algún ave ningún ave esta ave / estas aves esa ave / esas aves aquella ave / aquellas aves toda ave toda el ave toda un ave
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Sorry, no English spell-checker |
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