Tarea:
Students please visit this link and print off the packet provided! Please bring the printed packet to class next class! You do not have to complete any pages yet, just bring the printed packet to class. If you do not have a printer at home make sure you take care of this at school or the public library or a friends house.
Al entrar for 10-5-10
Students please visit this link and print off the packet provided! Please bring the printed packet to class next class! You do not have to complete any pages yet, just bring the printed packet to class. If you do not have a printer at home make sure you take care of this at school or the public library or a friends house.
If you did not complete your 200 conjuguemos attempts that were due today in class 10-5-10 you have tell next class to complete them. This is because I did not post the homework to the blog.
Al entrar for 10-5-10
Translate the sentences to Spanish.
I am
You are
You are formal
He is
She is
What is Juanita like?
What is Mr. Turnbaugh like?
María do you like to work? Yes, I am very hardworking.
I like to play sports. Are you sports minded?
Adjectives notes!
• Words that describe people and things are called adjectives.
• Most Spanish adjectives have two forms: masculine (ends in -o like simpático) and
feminine (ends in -a like estudiosa).
• Masculine adjectives are used with masculine nouns: Tomás es simpático.
• Feminine adjectives are used with feminine nouns: Luisa es estudiosa.
• Adjectives that end in -e and -ista may be used with either masculine or
feminine nouns:
Tomás es inteligente. Luisa es inteligente también.
Marcos es muy deportista. Ana es muy deportista también.
• Adjectives with the masculine form -dor have -dora as the feminine form:
Juan es trabajador. Susana es trabajadora también.
Definite and indefinite articles
• El and la are the Spanish definite articles. They mean the same as “the” in English.
• You use el with masculine nouns: el libro. You use la with feminine nouns:
la carpeta.
• Un and una are the Spanish indefinite articles. They mean the same as “a” and
“an” in English.
• You use un with masculine nouns: un libro. You use una with feminine nouns:
una carpeta.
Word order: Placement of adjectives
• English adjectives usually come before the noun they describe.
• Spanish adjectives usually come after the noun they describe:
Olga es una chica talentosa.
• Many Spanish sentences follow this pattern:
subject noun + verb + indefinite article and noun + adjective
1 2 3 4
Roberto es un estudiante bueno. Serena es una chica inteligente.
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
• Words that describe people and things are called adjectives.
• Most Spanish adjectives have two forms: masculine (ends in -o like simpático) and
feminine (ends in -a like estudiosa).
• Masculine adjectives are used with masculine nouns: Tomás es simpático.
• Feminine adjectives are used with feminine nouns: Luisa es estudiosa.
• Adjectives that end in -e and -ista may be used with either masculine or
feminine nouns:
Tomás es inteligente. Luisa es inteligente también.
Marcos es muy deportista. Ana es muy deportista también.
• Adjectives with the masculine form -dor have -dora as the feminine form:
Juan es trabajador. Susana es trabajadora también.
Definite and indefinite articles
• El and la are the Spanish definite articles. They mean the same as “the” in English.
• You use el with masculine nouns: el libro. You use la with feminine nouns:
la carpeta.
• Un and una are the Spanish indefinite articles. They mean the same as “a” and
“an” in English.
• You use un with masculine nouns: un libro. You use una with feminine nouns:
una carpeta.
Word order: Placement of adjectives
• English adjectives usually come before the noun they describe.
• Spanish adjectives usually come after the noun they describe:
Olga es una chica talentosa.
• Many Spanish sentences follow this pattern:
subject noun + verb + indefinite article and noun + adjective
1 2 3 4
Roberto es un estudiante bueno. Serena es una chica inteligente.
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
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