Gramática

PALABRAS INDEFINDAS Y NEGATIVAS

Like in English, Spanish have indefinite and negative words. The indefinite words, are those that refer to people or objects that are not specific. A good  example would be, someone. You are aware that the speaker is talking about a person, but not a specific person. On the other hand, the negative words are those use to contradict the existence of people of object or even to contradict a statement. An example of a negative word would be  no one. Each indefinite word has an opposite negative word.

 


Note that alguno/a/s, algún, ninguno/a, ningún have to match in gender and in number.

For example, algunas chicas, algunos chicos.

If you are using a singular masculine noun after alguno or ninguno, these forms are reduced to algún or ningún.

 For examplealgún lápiz, vs alguno lápiz.

Since alguno/a/s, algún, ninguno/a, ningún, alguien, and nadie refer to people they are often used with the personal a before them in a sentence. This happens when they are the direct object of the verb.

For example,  ¿Ha visto a alguien en la clase con camiseta negra?

 

PRÁCTICA

Now that you have learned about indefinite and negatives words, let’s practice;

Ejercicio 1

Licensing and Attribution:

Gramática content on this page was remixed from Español por el mundo by Gemma Morawski and Ani Alcocer, licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Adaptations include voice pronunciations provided by Gemma Morawski and openly-licensed images throughout the H5P flashcards attributed on each card via the H5P editing dashboard and forvo.com . Further adaptations include practice activities created by Gemma Morawski via H5p.

Images with voice were created by Gemma Morawski using canva.com, forvo.com, and H5P.

 

License

Palabras negativas e indefinidas / Indefinite and negative words Copyright © by Gemma Morawski. All Rights Reserved.

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