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indy
Where does the adjective come in the sentence before or after the noun?
For example if I am trying to say I do not understand the spanish home work. Will it be Yo no comprendo los deberes espanoles or yo no comprendo los espanoles deberes
12 jan. 2009 00:11
Antwoorden · 4
2
En general, el adjetivo viene después del pronombre; ocasionalmente se coloca antes por razones efecto literario o musicalidad de la frase, pero no es lo usual. En el ejemplo que usted pone, la forma adecuada es no entiendo la tarea (o el deber o el trabajo) de español.
12 januari 2009
Translating the previous answer to English: (because indy wants to Learn Spanish Using *English*)
"In general, the adjective comes after the noun; occasionally one uses it before the noun in order to have a literary or musical effect in the sentence, but this is not the usual. In your example, the most appropriate way is "No entiendo la tarea [or "el deber" or "el trabajo"] de español."
12 januari 2009
sorry, I made a mistake, I was trying to say "In a general way, the adjective can be before OR after the noun"
12 januari 2009
In a general way, the adjective can be before of after the noun. For example: "El tigre furioso" o "El furioso tigre" = "the furious tiger".
In you case, I think is better to say
* "No comprendo las tareas de español".
Zaijian!
12 januari 2009
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
indy
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Spaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Spaans
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