¡Género sustantivo!

In this discussion, we’ll explore the different ways nouns are used to represent people, animals, things, and their gender forms.

1. Nouns referring to people

Most nouns referring to men and boys are masculine.

  • el hombre (the man)
  • el rey (the king)

Most nouns referring to women and girls are feminine.

  • la mujer (the woman)
  • la reina (the queen)


When the same word is used to refer to either men/boys or women/girls, its gender usually changes depending on the sex of the person it refers to.

  • el estudiante (the male student)
  • la estudiante (the female student)
  • el belga (the Belgian man)
  • la belga (the Belgian woman)

Some words for people have only one possible gender, whether they refer to a male or a female.

la persona (the male or female person)
la víctima (the male or female victim)

In English, we can sometimes make a word masculine or feminine by changing the ending, for example, Englishman and Englishwoman or prince and princess. In Spanish, very often the ending of a noun changes depending on whether it refers to a man or a woman.

  • el camarero (the waiter)
  • la camarera (the waitress)
  • el empleado (the employee male)
  • la empleada (the employee female)
  • el inglés (the Englishman)
  • la inglesa (the Englishwoman)

2. Nouns referring to animals

In English we can choose between words like (bull) or (cow), depending on the sex of the animal. In Spanish too, there are sometimes separate words for male and female animals.

  • el toro (the bull)
  • la vaca (the cow)

Sometimes, the same word with different endings is used for male and female animals.

  • el perro (the male dog)
  • la perra (the female dog)
  • el gato (the male cat)
  • la gata (the female cat)

When you do not know or care what sex the animal is, you can usually use the masculine form as a general word.

Words for other animals don’t change according to the sex of the animal. Just learn the Spanish word with its gender, which is always the same.

  • el sapo (the toad)
  • el hámster (the hamster)
  • la cobaya (the guinea pig)
  • la tortuga (the tortoise)

3. Nouns referring to things

In English, we call all things – for example, table, car, book, apple – (it). In Spanish, however, things are either masculine or feminine. As things don’t divide into sexes the way humans and animals do, there are no physical clues to help you with their gender in Spanish. Try to learn the genders when you learn the word.

There are lots of rules to help you. Certain endings are usually found on masculine nouns, while other endings are usually found on feminine nouns.

masculine endingexamples
-oel libro (the books)
el periódico (the newspaper)
PERO
la mano (the hand)
la foto (the foto)
la moto (the motorbike)
la radio (the radio)
Ending is usually found on masculine nouns.

The following types of word are also masculine.

  • names of the days of the week and the months of the year
    • Te veré el lunes. (I’ll se you on Monday)
  • the names of languages
    • el inglés (English)
    • el español (Spanish)
    • Estudio el español. (I’m studying Spanish
  • the names of rivers, mountains and seas
    • el Ebro (the Ebro)
    • el Everest (Everest)
    • el Atlántico (the Atlantic)
feminine endingexamples
-ala casa (the house)
la cara (the face)
PERO
el día (the day)
el mapa (the map)
el planeta (the planet)
el tranvía (the tram)
…and many words ending in -ma;
el problema (the problem), el programs (the programme),
el sistema (the system), el clima (the climate)
-ción
-sión
la lección (the lesson)
la estación (the station)
la expresión (the expression)
-dad
-tad
-tud
la ciudad (the city)
la libertad (freedom)
la multitud (the crowd)
Endings are usually found on feminine nouns

Some words have different meanings depending on whether they are masculine or feminine…

masculinemeaningfemininemeaning
el capital(the capital money)la capital(the capital city)
el cometa(the comet)la cometa(the kite)
el cura(the priest)la cura(the cure)
el guía(the male guide)la guía(the guidebook/
the female guide)
los ejemplos

4. Gender forms of words

Like English, Spanish sometimes has very different words for males and females.

  • el hombre (the man)
  • la mujer (the woman)
  • el rey (the king
  • la reina (the queen)

Many Spanish words can be used to talk about men or women simply by changing the ending. For example, if the word for the male ends in -o, you can almost always make it feminine by changing the -o to -a.

  • el amigo (the male friend)
  • la amiga (the female friend)
  • el hermano (the brother)
  • la hermana (the sister)
  • el empleado (the male employee)
  • la empleada (the female employee)
  • el viudo (the widower)
  • la viuda (the widow)

Notice that some words referring to people end in -a in the masculine as well as the feminine. Only the article el, la, un y una can tell you what gender the noun is…

  • el dentista (the male dentist)
  • la dentista (the female dentist)
  • el deportista (the sportsman)
  • la deportista (the sportswoman)

Many masculine nouns ending in a consonant (any letter other than a vowel) become feminine by adding an -a

  • el español (the Spanish man)
  • la española (the Spanish woman)
  • el profesor (the male teacher)
  • la profesora (the female teacher)

If the last vowel of the masculine word has an accent, this is dropped in the feminine form.

  • un inglés (an Englishman)
  • una inglesa (an Englishwoman)
  • un francés (a Frenchman)
  • una francesa (a Frenchwoman)

Resumen

  1. The ending of a Spanish word often helps you work out its gender: for instance, if a word ends in -o, it is probably masculine; if it ends in -a, it is probably feminine.
  2. These endings generally mean that the noun is feminine: -ción, -sión, -dad, -tad, -tud
  3. Days of the week and months of the year are masculine, So are languages, mountains and seas.
  4. You can change the ending of some nouns from -o to -a to make a masculine noun feminine.