Spanish Gender and Nouns

Why are the Nouns having Genders?

Spanish Gender and Nouns
Nouns are used to name all sorts of things: people, animals, objects, places and etc. In order to use nouns correctly in Spanish, we need to know their grammatical gender. It doesn't mean that all of the objects have gender or physically feminine or masculine.

Nouns in Spanish have genders in a grammatical sense while it is used with articles and adjectives that match their gender.

Gender in Spanish
Here are three main groups of nouns in Spanish.
  • Nouns that end in -o (niño ‘child’, enojo ‘anger’).
  • Nouns that end in -a (casa ‘house’, ballena ‘whale’).
  • Nouns that end in -e or a consonant (tomate ‘tomato’, tenedor ‘fork’).

Determining Gender with Ending
Nouns ending in “o” and “a”
Rule
Most of the masculine nouns end with an “-o”.
  • el teatro (the theater)
  • el maestro (the teacher)
  • el libro (the book)

Rule
Most of the feminine nouns end with an “-a”.
  • la calle (the street)
  • la colita (the tail)
  • la hamaca (the hammock)

We can conclude that, nouns ending with an “-o” are mostly masculine and nouns ending with an “-a” are feminine. While for nouns ending with an “-e” or a consonant can be either both genders.

But there are still cases where the rules above is not applicable.
FEMININE NOUNS END WITH “-o” MASCULINE NOUNS END WITH “-a”
la mano (hand) el drama (drama)
la foto (photograph) el mapa (map)
la moto (motorcycle) el idioma (language)
la radio (radio) el problema (problem)

 

Feminine endings other than “-a”
Rule
Nouns with the following endings are usually feminine: “-z”, “-dad”, “-tud”, “-ción”, “-sión”, “-umbre” and “-ie”. These nouns are abstract nouns where their gender is not being determined by physical.
FEMININE ENDING EXAMPLE
la cicatriz (scar) 
ad  la felicidad (happiness) 
tud  la juventud (youth) 
ción  la emoción (emotion) 
sión  la inversión (investment) 
umbre  la cumbre (summit) 
ie  la serie (series) 

 

Masculine endings other than “-o”
Rule
Nouns end with “-aje”, “-bre”, “-án”, “-or”, “-és”, “-ón” and stressed vowel are generally masculine.
MASCULINE ENDING EXAMPLE
aje  el tatuaje (tattooing) 
bre  el nombre (name) 
án  el alacrán (scorpion) 
or  el escultor (sculptor) 
és  el francés (Frenchman) 
ón  el cinturón (belt) 
Stressed vowel  el pirulí (lollipop), el ualabí (wallaby), el sofá (sofa

 

Ending "-e” in Spanish Nouns
Rule
Some endings don’t reveal the gender of the word. For example, the ending “-e” can occur in either both genders. Other than that, the ending “-te” and “-ista” can also be applicable for both genders.
EXAMPLE
el/ la coche (car),  el/ la cantante (singer) 
el/ la noche (night)  el/ la futbolista (footballer)

Tips
Here is a n interesting way of remembering some certain gender of Spanish nouns. We know that nouns ending with "-a” is usually feminine, but it is funny that in words ending with “-ma” is actually masculine, while words ending with “-dad” is feminine.

We can say that “-ma” is masculine while “-dad” is feminine.

 

Same Nouns but Different Meaning in Gender
There are a few situations where the same word can have two completely different meanings, one when used with a feminine article and another when used with a masculine article.
FEMININE MASCULINE
el capital (money)  la capital (city) 
el guía (tour guide)  la guía (guidebook) 
el frente (front)  el frente (forehead) 
el cometa (comet)  la  cometa (kite) 

 

Article to Determine the Gender
Rule
Another way to determine the gender of nouns is to look at the article. Nouns starts with “el” or “los” are masculine nouns, while for the feminine nouns is “la” and “las”.
MASCULINE FEMININE
SINGULAR PLURAL SINGULAR PLURAL
el los la las

Nouns referring to persons or animals
Replacing “-o” with “-a”
Rule
If a masculine noun ends in “o”, often its feminine equivalent is derived by replacing the “o” into “a”.
NOUN MASCULINE FEMININE
Fox/ vixen el zorro la zorra
Lizard el lagarto la lagarta
Son/ daughter el hijo  la hija
Secretary el secretario la secretaria

 

Adding an “-a” to the Ending
Rule
For masculine nouns ending in a consonant, especially “or”, “ón”, “és” and “ín”, the feminine equivalent is formed by adding an “-a”.
NOUN MASCULINE FEMININE
Dancer  el bailarín  la bailarina 
Hairdresser  el peluquero  la peluquera 
Lizard  el lagarto  la lagarta 
Donkey  el burro  la burra 

 

Adding an “-esa” or “-isa” to the Ending
Rule
For some of the masculline nouns, we remove the final vowel and replace it with a feminine ending “-esa” or “-isa”.
NOUN MASCULINE FEMININE
Prophet/ prophetess  el profeta  la profetisa 
Prince/ princess  el principe  la princesa 
Tiger/ tigress  el tigre  la tigresa 

B. Nouns that End in a Vowel
Nouns end with consonant
Rule
Adding “-es” to the ending of nouns with consonant other than “-s”. This rule also applies to singular nouns end with stressed final + all consonant.
Tips
When a singular noun ends in “-z”, change the “-z” to a “-c” before adding “-es”.
When a singular noun ends with a syllable of “stressed vowel + consonant”, the “accent” will be removed.
NOUN SINGULAR PLURAL
Month  el mes  el meses 
Button  el botón  el botónes 
King/ king and queen  el rey  los reyes 
Actress  la actriz  las actrices 
Bus  el autobús  los autobuses 

 

Nouns end with consonant “-s”
Rule
The plural form of nouns ending with “-s” should remain unchanged.

NOUN SINGULAR PLURAL
Cactus  el cactus  los cactus 
Thursday  el jueves  los jueves 
Virus  el virus  los virus 

 

Foreign Words in Spanish Nouns
Rule
If it’s a foreign word, just add “-s”.
NOUN SINGULAR PLURAL
Hacker  el hacker  los hackers 
Barman  el barman  los barman 

 

Forever Plural Nouns
Rule
Some nouns are always in plural form, let’s see the below table.
NOUN PLURAL
Scissors las tijeras
Glasses gafas

 

Uncountable Nouns
Rule
Uncountable nouns are also called as mass nouns. Common types of uncountable nouns include personal qualities, liquid and abstractions. You won’t count “happiness” as “one happiness, two happiness, three happiness...”.
NOUN PLURAL
Patience  la paciencia 
Courage  el valor