Modern Spanish Grammar: A Practical Guide

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  • 1 Pronunciation and spelling Part A Structures

  • 1.1 The Spanish alphabet

  • 1.2 Diphthongs

  • 1.3 Syllabification

  • 1.4Sinalefa

  • 1.5 The written stress accent

  • 1.6 Punctuation

  • 1.7 Capital letters

  • 2 Gender and gender agreements

  • 2.1 Masculine and feminine

  • 2.2 Plural

  • 2.3 General rules for gender

  • 2.4 Words which are both masculine and feminine

  • 2.5 Nouns which vary in gender

  • 2.6 Agreement classes of adjectives

  • 2.7 The neuter

  • 2.8Lo

  • 3 Plurals and number agreement

  • 3.1 Plural forms

  • 3.2 Number agreement

  • 4 The articles

  • 4.1 Definite article

    • in Spanish and English 4.2 Principal differences between the use of the definite article



  • 4.3 Definite article +que and de

  • 4.4 The indefinite article

    • article in Spanish and English 4.5 Principal differences between the use of the indefinite



  • 4.6 Use of the plural unos, unas

  • 5 Adjectives

  • 5.1 Shortening of adjectives

  • 5.2 Adjective position

  • 5.3 Adjectives used as nouns

  • 5.4 Adjectives used as adverbs

  • 6 Comparative forms of adjectives and adverbs

  • 6.1 Lack of distinction between ‘more .’ and ‘most .’

  • 6.2 Syntax of comparative constructions

  • 7 Numbers

  • 7.1 Cardinal numbers

  • 7.2 Ordinal numbers

  • 7.3 Expressions involving numbers

  • 8 Personal pronouns

  • 8.1 Subject pronouns

  • 8.2 Object pronouns

  • 8.3 Reduplicated pronoun structures

  • 9 Demonstratives

  • 9.1 Forms

  • 9.2 Order

  • 9.3 Usage

  • 10 Possessives

  • 10.1 Forms

  • 10.2 Usage

  • 11 Relative pronouns

  • 11.1Que

  • 11.2El que/el cual, etc.

  • 11.3Quien(es)

  • 11.4Cuyo (adj.)

  • 12 Interrogative and exclamatory forms

  • 12.1¿Cómo?/¡Cómo!

  • 12.2¿Cuál? and ¿Qué?/¡Qué!

  • 12.3¿Cuándo?

  • 12.4¿Cuánto?/¡Cuánto!

  • 12.5¿Dónde?/¿Adónde?

  • 12.6¿Para qué?/¿Por qué?

  • 12.7¿Qué tal?

  • 12.8¿Quién(es)?

  • 12.9¿Verdad?,¿no?

  • 13 Indefinite and negative pronouns and adjectives

  • 13.1Alguno and ninguno

  • 13.2Alguien and nadie

  • 13.3Uno

  • 13.4Algo and nada

  • 13.5Cualquiera

  • 13.6Quienquiera

  • 13.7Todo

  • 14 Adverbs

  • 14.1 Formation of adverbs in -mente

  • 14.2 Other adverbs

  • 15 Negation

  • 15.1No

  • 15.2 Negative element following the verb

  • 15.3 Expressions requiring a negative

  • 15.4No sino

  • 15.5 Negation of adjectives

  • 15.6 Negative questions

  • 16 Verb forms

  • 16.1 The overall pattern

  • 17 Use of the verb forms

  • 17.1 Present

  • 17.2 Perfect

  • 17.3 Imperfect

  • 17.4 Preterite

  • 17.5 Future

  • 17.6 Future perfect

  • 17.7 Conditional

  • 17.8 Conditional perfect

  • 17.9 Pluperfect

  • 17.10 Past anterior

  • 17.11 Infinitive

  • 17.12 Gerund

  • 17.13 Imperative

  • 18 Use of the subjunctive

    • verbal expressions 18.1 The subjunctive in complements of verbs and



  • 18.2 The subjunctive after conjunctions

  • 18.3 The subjunctive in main clauses

  • 19 Sequence of tense

  • 19.1 In reported (indirect) speech

  • 19.2 Constructions involving the subjunctive

  • 20 Other forms of the verb and their uses

  • 20.1Estar+ gerund

  • 20.2Ir a+ infinitive

  • 20.3Llevar+ gerund

  • 20.4Acabar de+ infinitive

  • 20.5Ir+ gerund

  • 20.6Venir+ gerund

  • 20.7Tener+ past participle

  • 21 Modal auxiliary verbs and expressions

  • 21.1Poder

  • 21.2Deber (de)

  • 21.3Saber

  • 21.4Querer

  • 21.5Tener que

  • 21.6Haber de

  • 21.7Haber que

  • 22 Ser and estar

  • 22.1Ser

  • 22.2Estar

  • 23 The reflexive

  • 23.1 Literal reflexive

  • 23.2 Reflexives with a conventionalized meaning

  • 23.3 Reciprocal reflexives

  • 23.4 Inherently reflexive verbs

  • 23.5 The reflexive corresponding to an English intransitive

  • 23.6 Reflexive verbs with prepositional objects

  • 23.7 The intensifying reflexive

  • 23.8 The impersonal reflexive

  • 23.9 The passive reflexive

  • 24 The passive

  • 24.1Ser+ past participle

  • 24.2Estar+ past participle

  • 24.3 The passive reflexive

  • 24.4 Use of indefinite subjects

  • 24.5 Bringing the object to the front of the sentence

  • 25 Prepositions

  • 25.1 Basic use of prepositions

  • 25.2 Groups of prepositions

  • 26 Complementation

  • 26.1 Sentence complementation

  • 26.2 Infinitive complementation

  • 26.3 Gerund complementation

  • 27 Conjunctions

  • 27.1 Coordinating conjunctions

  • 27.2 Subordinating conjunctions

  • 28 Word order

  • 28.1 Statements

  • 28.2 Questions

  • 29 Making social contacts I Social contacts and communication strategies

  • 29.1 Greeting someone

  • 29.2 Conveying greetings

  • 29.3 Asking people how they are

  • 29.4 Introducing yourself and others

  • 29.5 Taking leave

  • 29.6 Expressing wishes

  • 29.7 Congratulating someone

  • 29.8 Using the phone

  • 29.9 Writing letters

  • 30 Basic strategies for communication

    • call for attention 30.1 Attracting someone’s attention and responding to a



  • 30.2 Starting up a conversation

  • 30.3 Requesting repetition and responding

  • 30.4 Making sure you understand and are understood

  • 30.5 Signalling that one understands the speaker

  • 30.6 Asking how to pronounce or spell a word

  • 30.7 Interrupting a speaker

  • 30.8 Using fillers

  • 30.9 Changing the subject

  • 30.10 Formal development of a topic

  • 31 Asking questions and responding II Giving and seeking factual information

  • 31.1 Questions requiring a yes or no answer

  • 31.2 Questions seeking partial information

  • 31.3 Polite and indirect questions

  • 31.4 Negative questions

  • 31.5 Responding to a question with another question

  • 31.6 Responding to a yes or no question

  • 32 Negating

  • 32.1No+ verb/auxiliary

  • 32.2 Limiting the scope of negation

  • 32.3 Negating adjectives and nouns

  • 32.4 Other ways of expressing negation

  • 33 Reporting

  • 33.1 Direct and indirect speech

  • 33.2 Indirect speech

  • 33.3 Reporting statements

  • 33.4 Reporting questions

  • 33.5 Reporting yes and no answers

  • 33.6 Reporting commands and requests

  • 34 Asking and giving personal information

  • 34.1 Name

  • 34.2 Nationality and place of origin

  • 34.3 Marital status

  • 34.4 Age

  • 34.5 Date and place of birth

  • 34.6 Occupation, status or rank, religion and political affiliation

  • 35 Identifying people, places and things

  • 35.1 Identifying oneself and others

  • 35.2 Identifying places

  • 35.3 Identifying things

  • 36 Describing

  • 36.1 Referring to a subject’s nature or identity

  • 36.2 Enquiring about a subject’s nature or identity

  • 36.3 Describing a state or condition

  • 36.4 Descriptions involving an unspoken comparison

  • 36.5 Asking and saying what something is made of

  • 36.6 Describing events

  • 36.7 Describing facts or information

  • 36.8 Describing social manners

  • 36.9 Describing the weather

  • 37 Making comparisons

  • 37.1 Comparisons of inequality

  • 37.2 Comparisons of equality

  • 37.3 Comparing more than two objects

  • 38 Expressing existence and availability

  • 38.1 Asking and answering questions regarding existence

  • 38.2 Describing facilities

  • 38.3 Expressing availability

  • 39 Expressing location and distance

  • 39.1 Expressing location

  • 39.2 Asking and saying where an event will take or took place

  • 39.3 Indicating precise location

  • 39.4 Indicating distance

  • 40 Expressing possessive relations

  • 40.1 Expressing ownership and possession

  • 40.2 Emphasizing possessive relations

    • body and personal effects 40.3 Expressing possessive relations involving parts of the



  • 40.4 Asking whose something is

  • 40.5 Other ways of expressing possession

  • 41 Expressing changes

  • 41.1 Talking about temporary changes

  • 41.2 Talking about long-lasting changes

  • 41.3 Talking about changes resulting from a natural process

  • 41.4 Talking about the result of a process of change

  • 41.5 Talking about changes caused by an action

  • 41.6 Other ways of expressing change

  • 42 Describing processes and results

  • 42.1 Describing processes

  • 42.2 Describing results

  • 49 Expressing certainty and uncertainty

  • 49.1 Saying how certain one is of something

  • 49.2 Enquiring about certainty or uncertainty

  • 50 Expressing supposition

  • 50.1 Common expressions of supposition

  • 51 Expressing conditions

  • 51.1 Open conditions

  • 51.2 Unfulfilled conditions

  • 51.3 Other conditional expressions

  • 52 Expressing contrast or opposition

  • 52.1 Common expressions of contrast or opposition

  • 53 Expressing capability and incapability

    • incapability



  • 53.2 Enquiring and making statements about learned abilities

  • 54 Seeking and giving permission

  • 54.1 Seeking permission

  • 54.2 Giving permission

  • 54.3 Stating that permission is withheld

  • 55 Asking and giving opinions

  • 55.1 Asking someone’s opinion

  • 55.2 Expressing opinions

  • 55.3 Enquiring about other people’s opinions

  • 55.4 Reporting on other people’s opinions

  • 56 Expressing agreement, disagreement and indifference

  • 56.1 Expressing agreement

  • 56.2 Expressing disagreement

  • 56.3 Asking about agreement and disagreement

  • 56.4 Expressing indifference

  • 57 Expressing desires and preferences IV Expressing emotional attitudes

  • 57.1 Expressing desires

  • 57.2 Enquiring about desires

  • 57.3 Expressing preferences and enquiring about preferences

  • 57.4 Expressing desires and preferences involving others

  • 58 Expressing likes and dislikes

  • 58.1 How to say you like or dislike something or someone

  • 58.2 Enquiring about likes and dislikes

  • 58.3 Other ways of expressing likes and dislikes

  • 59 Expressing surprise

  • 59.1 Set expressions

  • 59.2 Expressing surprise with regard to someone or something

  • 60 Expressing satisfaction and dissatisfaction

  • 60.1 Expressing satisfaction

  • 60.2 Expressing dissatisfaction

  • 60.3 Enquiring about satisfaction and dissatisfaction

  • 61 Expressing approval and disapproval

  • 61.1 Expressing approval

  • 61.2 Expressing disapproval

  • 61.3 Enquiring about approval and disapproval

  • 62 Expressing hope

  • 62.1 Saying what one hopes or others hope to do

  • 62.2 Expressing hope with regard to others

  • 62.3 Expressing hope in reply to a question or as a statement

  • 63 Expressing sympathy

  • 63.1 Saying one is sorry about something

  • 63.2 Saying one is glad about something

  • 64 Apologizing and expressing forgiveness

  • 64.1 Apologizing

  • 64.2 Expressing forgiveness

  • 65 Expressing fear or worry

  • 65.1 Common expressions of fear

  • 65.2 Other ways of expressing fear

  • 66 Expressing gratitude

  • 66.1 Expressing gratitude

  • 66.2 Responding to an expression of gratitude

  • 67 Giving advice and making suggestions V The language of persuasion

    • the speaker 67.1 Giving advice and making suggestions not involving



  • 67.2 Suggesting a course of action involving the speaker

  • 67.3 Asking for advice and suggestions

  • 68 Making requests

  • 68.1 Common expressions of request

  • 69 Giving directions, instructions and orders

  • 69.1 Giving directions

  • 69.2 Giving instructions

  • 69.3 Giving orders

  • 70 Making an offer or invitation and accepting or declining

  • 70.1 Making an offer or invitation

  • 70.2 Accepting or declining an offer or invitation

  • 70.3 Enquiring whether an invitation is accepted or declined

  • 71 Talking about the present VI Expressing temporal relations

  • 71.1 Describing present states or conditions

    • or true in the present 71.2 Giving information about facts which are generally true

    • in progress 71.3 Referring to events which are in the present but not



  • 71.4 Expressing timeless ideas or emotions

  • 71.5 Referring to events taking place in the present

  • 71.6 Talking about permanent and habitual actions

  • 71.7 Saying how long one has been doing something

    • regard to something in the present 71.8 Expressing possibility, probability or uncertainty with



  • 72 Talking about the future

  • 72.1 Expressing plans and intentions

  • 72.2 Referring to the immediate future

  • 72.3 Referring to future events

  • 72.4 Expressing promises

    • regard to something in the future 72.5 Expressing possibility, probability or uncertainty with



  • 73 Talking about the past

    • recent past 73.1 Referring to past events related to the present or the

    • past and is still in progress 73.2 Referring to a prolonged action which began in the



  • 73.3 Referring to the immediate past

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