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Why is the word flores feminine?

 

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  #1  
Old June 18, 2014, 06:35 AM
tal69 tal69 is offline
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Why is the word flores feminine?

Hey guys. I started my Spanish studies two days ago, and I have a problem.

Masculine nouns usually end with O or E
Feminine nouns usually end with A

what I don't understand is why the flores is feminine.

thanks very much in advance
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  #2  
Old June 18, 2014, 06:58 AM
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Julvenzor Julvenzor is offline
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There are no scientific reasons for it, just it's an etymological issue. Grammar books explains different general rules; but, many times, the only solution consists of learning all exceptions by heart:

Mano => F
Mapa => M
Diagrama => M
Programa => M

And so on.

A pleasure.

Last edited by Julvenzor; June 18, 2014 at 03:05 PM. Reason: Screwy mistake...
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Old June 18, 2014, 07:01 AM
tal69 tal69 is offline
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thanks!

would it be grammatically acceptable in everyday speech to say, ' unos flores ' ?
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Old June 18, 2014, 07:14 AM
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Julvenzor Julvenzor is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tal69 View Post
thanks!

would it be grammatically acceptable in everyday speech to say, ' unos flores ' ?

Never. If a word is masculine, you must use masculine articles (un/unos/el/los); if it's feminine, its parallel (una/unas/la/las). Some words can present both forms according to its meaning (the article modifies the meaning).
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Old June 18, 2014, 08:49 AM
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AngelicaDeAlquezar AngelicaDeAlquezar is offline
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@Tal69: There are no rules for determining the gender of a noun in Spanish. What you quoted are just generalizations to make learning a bit easier, but by no means are rules and even less they are infallible, as you have already seen from Julvenzor's examples.

Also, these two generalizations involve nouns that end with a vowel, but the word "flor" ends with a consonant. And then, even though most nouns ending with "r" are masculine, "flor" is an exception.

Genders must be memorized, but the only way to get them right every time is to practice the language; over time these things come naturally.
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Old June 18, 2014, 02:28 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Julvenzor View Post
There is no scientific reasons for it, just it's an etymological issue.
And even then it's a rare one: the Latin word flos is masculine, but at some point most of the Romance languages have made their cognate words feminine. (Italian is an exception). I wonder whether it happened in Mediaevel Latin, perhaps influenced by the goddess Flora.
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Old July 16, 2014, 04:06 AM
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Suavemente Suavemente is offline
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Por lo general...

Las palabras que suelen acabar en: a, ción, sión, tud, umbre.... son femeninos.
Las palabras que suelen acabar en: o, un consonante.... son masculinos.
Las palabras que acaban en la letra "e" pueden ser o masculinos o femeninos.

Por supuesto hay excepciones....
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