2.6 Agreement classes of adjectives
There are several diferent patterns of agreement for adjectives in Spanish:
Class 3. A large number of adjectives ending in a consonant in the masculine singular,
especially those ending in -or when this denotes an agent, -án, the suffixes -ón and -ín,
and adjectives denoting nationality or membership of another grouping. The common
link is that such adjectives are typically used of people, and are very often used as nouns
in their own right:
Class 4. An increasing number of words used adjectivally in modern Spanish have no
distinct agreement forms. Among these are:
Class 1. Masculine singular ending in -o:
Singular Plural
Masculine bueno buenos
Feminine buena buenas
Class 2. Masculine singular ending in -e, a consonant or a stressed vowel (but there are
many exceptions, constituted by Group 3 below):
Singular Plural
Masculine triste tristes
Feminine triste tristes
Singular Plural
Masculine feliz felices
Feminine feliz felices
Singular Plural
Masculine israelí israelíes
Feminine israelí israelíes
Singular Plural
Masculine español españoles
Feminine española españolas
Singular Plural
Masculine inglés ingleses
Feminine inglesa inglesas
Singular Plural
Masculine hablador habladores
Feminine habladora habladoras
Agreement classes of adjectives 2.6