tall
alto/alta
Fill in the blank to make the formula correct; Tan + (______) + como
adjective
Fill in the blank to make the formula correct; Más/Menos + (adjective) + ___
que
This is how you say "my book" in Spanish
mi libro
young
joven
In Spanish, possessive adjectives must match the noun in number. To say "your pens" you would use this specific word for "your"
tus: tus boligrafos/tus plumas
brave
valiente
The Spanish word su is a hardworking pronoun! It can mean "his," "her," "your" (formal), or this plural English possessive.
Their/your (plural: ustedes)
nice
simpatico/simpatica
Is this correct? Carolina es tan valiente como que Martin. Explain.
No, you can not use tan como and que together. It should be Carolina es tan valiente como Martin.
Is this correct? ; Ese vestido comer es bonito.
No, a dress can not be pretty to eat
Is this correct? Ana habla con los clientes más frecuentemente que Dora.
Yes, Ana does talk to customers more than Dora
Unlike mi or tu, the possessive adjective for "our" (nuestro) must match the noun in both number and this grammatical feature.
gender: masculine/feminine
hard working
trabajador/trabajadora
Create a sentence using a superlative in it
If you got it right, I'll tell you, if not, you need a better teacher
Create a sentence expressing inequality
If you got it right, I'll tell you, if not, wow, that is all on you, I am not taking the blame
Translate the entire following sentence into Spanish, making sure the possessive adjective matches: "Our female cousins are intelligent."
"Nuestras primas son inteligentes"