'Los' is the Spanish plural masculine definite article, 'the.' 'EEUU' is a Spanish abbreviation for Estados Unidos: the United States. Two Es are used to indicate the plural nature of the noun: States. Two Us have to be used in accordance with Spanish grammar's adjective use rules. Hence, los EEUU, the US.
Ugly is feo (male) and fea (female)---In order to spell 'ugly' in Spanish, you have to remember that 'ugly' is an adjective, and Spanish adjectives have to agree in number and gender with the nouns they modify. There are two genders [masculine & feminine], and two 'numbers' [singular and plural]. That means there are 2 x 2= 4 different ways to spell ugly in Spanish. It also means there are at least 4 different ways to spell ALL Spanish adjectives. The four ways to spell ugly in Spanish are:1) feo [single, masculine] The ugly dog.2) feos [plural, masculine] The ugly dogs.3) fea [single, feminine] The ugly table.4) feas [plural, feminine] The ugly tables.
Arcos is the plural of arco which has two meanings: An arch (architecture) and a bow (weapon)
Dos is two in Spanish.
It can be either. The difference between formal/informal in Spanish is mainly in the second person singular (and plural, for the Spanish used in Spain). In other words, there are two different forms for "you" (singular), but there is no such distinction for "I", or for that matter for "he" or "she".
In English, we have only one definite article, the word "the." The two indefinite articles are "a" and "an," and we choose simply according to the sound of the following word. In many languages, there are more forms of definite and indefinite articles, and the right form in a particular sentence might depend on the number (singular or plural) and the gender (masculine or feminine) of the noun they modify. For example, definite in Spanish: "El"--singular masculine; "La"--singular feminine; "Los"--plural masculine; "Las"--plural feminine. Similarly, Spanish indefinite articles are "un," "una," "unos," and "unas.) German is even more complicated, because they have to agree also in case--whether the noun is a subject, object, or possessive.
The plural indefinite pronoun is few, a word that takes the place of a number, more than two but not many.
In English, there are only 2, but there are 2 forms of the indefinite article.The definite article - theThe indefinite article - a (an when follwed by a vowel sound)
The two kinds of indefinite pronouns are indefinite pronouns that refer to people, such as "someone" or "anyone," and indefinite pronouns that refer to things, such as "something" or "anything."
There are two: the definite article the, and the indefinite article an ( reduced to a before a consonant sound).
A pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence.A plural pronoun takes the place of a plural noun, or takes the place of two or more nouns or pronouns.Examples of plural pronouns:weusyou (both singular and plural)they, themthese, thoseours, ouryours, yourtheirs, theirExamples:You and I can go now. Or, We can go now.The books are due back at the library. Or, They are due back at the library. I can take them when I go out.John and June are coming to lunch. They will be here by noon.
A is an article - an indefinite article. There are two indefinite articles a and an. An is used before words that start with a vowel.eg an apple, an advance, an orangutang -- a helicopter, a fence, a peacock
La - The El - the/this
The definite article in English is the word the eg the word The indefinitearticle is the word a or an eg a word or an apple a is used before words starting with a consonant except words starting with unaspirated h eg a book an is used before words starting with a vowel or unaspirated h eg an apple, an hour, an historic day
The man over there carrying an umbrella is the person she is referring to. The two articles in her question are "a" and "an," which are both indefinite articles used before singular nouns to indicate a non-specific item or person.
Indefinite articles (a, an) can be tricky for students because they require an understanding of noun countability and context. Students need to learn when to use "a" or "an" based on the sound that follows, as well as when to omit articles altogether. With practice and exposure to various contexts, students can improve their usage of indefinite articles.
It is not technically an adjective. It is called an article, and is one of the two 'indefinite articles' - the other being "a." The third article is the definite article: "the."