Spanish adjectives

Spanish adjectives are similar to those in most other Indo-European languages. They are generally postpositive, and they agree in both gender and number with the noun they modify.

Inflection and usage

Adjectives in Spanish can be broadly divided into two groups: those whose lemma (the form found in dictionaries) ends in -o, and those whose lemma does not. The former generally inflect for both gender and number, and the latter generally inflect for just number. Frío ("cold"), for example, inflects for both gender and number. When it is used with a masculine singular noun, the masculine singular form frío (the lemma) is used. When it is used with a feminine singular noun, it becomes fría; -a is generally the feminine singular ending for adjectives that inflect for gender. When it is used with a masculine plural noun, it becomes fríos, and when it is used with a feminine plural noun, it becomes frías; -s is the plural marker for both the masculine and feminine with adjectives that inflect for gender. Thus:

Adjectives whose lemma does not end in -o, however, inflect differently. These adjectives almost always inflect only for number; -s is once again the plural marker, and if the lemma ends in a consonant, the adjective takes -es in the plural. Thus:

The division into these two groups is a generalisation, however. There are many examples, such as the adjective español itself, of adjectives whose lemmas do not end in -o but nevertheless take -a in the feminine singular as well as -as in the feminine plural and thus have four forms: in the case of español, español, española, españoles, españolas. There are also adjectives that do not inflect at all (generally words borrowed from other languages, such as the French beige (also Hispanicised to beis)).

Spanish adjectives are very similar to nouns and are often interchangeable with them. A bare adjective can be used with an article and thus function as a noun where English would require nominalisation using the pronoun one(s). For example:

Masculine singular adjectives can also be used with the neuter article lo to signify "the [adjective] thing, the [adjective] part". Thus:

The only inflectionally irregular adjectives in Spanish are those with irregular comparative forms, and only four do.

Spanish adjectives are generally postpositive, that is, they come after the noun they modify. Thus el libro largo ("the long book"), la casa grande ("the big house"), los hombres altos ("the tall men"), etc. There are, however, a small number of adjectives, including all ordinal numerals as well as words such as otro ("other") and todo ("all"), that must be placed before the noun they modify. There are also a small number that can be placed before or after the noun and that change meaning according to that positioning, and some adjectives, especially those that form something of a fixed phrase with the noun (e.g. oscura noche ("dark night"), alta montaña ("high mountain")), can be placed before or after the noun with little change in meaning.

Apocope

A small number of adjectives have apocopic forms: forms in which the final syllable, always including a vowel and sometimes a consonant, is dropped in certain environments. They are:

Base form Apocope Environment
alguno ("some") algún before masculine singular nouns
bueno ("good") buen before masculine singular nouns
ciento ("hundred") cien before nouns and, in composite numbers, before
numbers equal to or greater than mil ("thousand")
cualquiera ("whatever", singular)
cualesquiera (plural)
cualquier
cualesquier
before the noun
grande ("big, grand") gran before singular nouns
malo ("bad") mal before masculine singular nouns
ninguno ("no, none") ningún before masculine singular nouns
primero ("first") primer before masculine singular nouns
tercero ("third") tercer before masculine singular nouns

When used together in the environments in which they apocopate, adjectives with apocopic forms are all apocopated: thus ningún buen hombre ("no good man"), algún mal día ("some bad day"), el primer gran árbol ("the first big tree"), etc. In the case of grande, which is the only apocopic adjective with regular comparative and superlative forms (más grande and el más grande, respectively), the comparative and superlative apocopate in the same manner as the positive: la más gran casa but la casa más grande, etc.

Adjectives that change meaning

Some adjectives change meanings depending on their position: either before or after the noun. They are:

Before noun Word After noun
former antiguo ancient
certain (particular) cierto certain (sure)
darn dichoso lucky, happy
great, impressive grande (gran) large (physically)
half- medio middle, average
same mismo (the thing) itself
another, different nuevo brand new
unfortunate pobre poor
own propio proper
sheer puro pure
only único unique
former, long-standing viejo old, aged

Comparative and superlative constructions

Comparatives are normally expressed with the adverbs más ("more") and menos ("less") followed by the adjective; the object of comparison is introduced with the particle que ("than"). For example, X es más grande que Y ("X is bigger/greater than Y"). Superlatives (in the cross-linguistic, semantic sense) are also expressed with the adverbs más and menos, but this time with a definite article preceding the noun: la persona más interesante ("the most interesting person"); the object of comparison is introduced with the preposition de ("of"). The adjectives bueno ("good"), malo ("bad"), joven ("young"), and viejo ("old") have irregular comparative forms: mejor ("better"), peor ("worse"), menor ("younger"), and mayor ("older"), respectively. Mejor and peor are placed before the nouns they modify: la mejor cosa, ("the best thing"), el peor libro ("the worst book"), etc.

Because the definite article is, along with más or menos, the superlative marker, the comparative is grammatically indistinguishable from the superlative when used with it; an additional qualifier phrase such as de los dos ("of the two") must therefore be used to indicate that the adjective is the comparative form and not the superlative.

The superlative

Instead of putting muy, "very" before an adjective, one can use a special form called the superlative to intensify an idea. This consists of the suffix -ísimo. This form derives from the Latin superlative, but no longer means "the most ...", which is expressed in the ways explained above. Nevertheless, the name is retained for historical reasons.

Regular forms
Irregular forms
*These two forms keep the original meaning of the superlative: not "very" but "the most".
Forms that are irregular in high literary style but not normally
Forms no longer considered superlative

Applying -ísimo to nouns is not common, but there is the famous case of Generalísimo.

As in English and other languages influenced by it, a teenspeak superlative can be formed by the prefix super-, or sometimes hiper-, ultra-, re- or requete-. They can also be written as adverbs separate from the word.

External links

For a list of words relating to Spanish adjectives, see the Spanish adjectives category of words in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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