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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
Jan 12, 2009 12:11 AM
Answers · 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.
January 12, 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."
January 12, 2009
sorry, I made a mistake, I was trying to say "In a general way, the adjective can be before OR after the noun"
January 12, 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!
January 12, 2009
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indy
Language Skills
English, Spanish
Learning Language
Spanish
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