Practise a new set of common Spanish adjectives. Translate each English adjective into Spanish, paying attention to gender agreement. Beginner–elementary level.
🔤 Vocabulary spotlight
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Sensation & state adjectives — delicioso (delicious), dulce (sweet), sano (healthy), tranquilo (calm), débil (weak) — most follow standard -o/-a gender agreement: un clima seco / una zona seca.
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Agreement in real sentences — La situación es complicada — complicada agrees with the feminine situación. El niño está mojado vs. La niña está mojada. State adjectives pair with estar; character adjectives prefer ser.
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Expressing judgment — ¡Qué injusto! (How unfair!), ¡Qué repugnante! (How disgusting!). Use ser for lasting traits: Es una persona tranquila. Use estar for temporary states: Estoy débil hoy (I'm feeling weak today).
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Write the correct Spanish word to complete the sentences below. Choose from the following options: delicioso, repugnante, injusto, seco, complicado, sano, mojado, dulce, tranquilo, debil. In your answers, make sure that the ADJECTIVE agrees with its corresponding NOUN. (eg. La mujer es bella.)