Spanish: An Essential Grammar

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     - spelling and punctuation Chapter 1 The alphabet, pronunciation, stress,
- 1.1 The alphabet
- 1.2 Pronunciation
- 1.3 Stress and written accents
- 1.4 Spelling – capital letters
- 1.5 Punctuation


  • Chapter 2 Nouns

    • 2.1 Plural forms of nouns

    • 2.2 Gender

    • 2.3 Collective nouns and agreement



  • Chapter 3 Definite and indefinite articles

    • 3.1 Forms of the articles

    • 3.2 The definite article

    • 3.3 The indefinite article

    • 3.4 The neuter article lo



  • Chapter 4 Demonstrative adjectives and pronouns

    • 4.1 Demonstrative adjectives

    • 4.2 Masculine and feminine demonstrative pronouns

    • 4.3 Neuter demonstrative pronouns

























  • Chapter 5 Possessive adjectives

    • 5.1 Possessive adjectives before the noun

    • 5.2 Possessive adjectives after the noun

    • 5.3 Definite and neuter articles with possessives

    • 5.4 Avoidance of ambiguity with su/susand suyo/a/os/as

    • 5.5 Parts of the body and personal effects

    • 5.6 Possessive adjectives with adverbs and prepositions



  • Chapter 6 Adjectives

    • 6.1 Gender

    • 6.2 Singular and plural of adjectives

    • 6.3 Shortening of adjectives

    • 6.4 Position of adjectives

    • 6.5 Translating English ‘un-’ + adjective

    • 6.6 Verb + adjective sequences



  • Chapter 7 Adverbs

    • 7.1 Adverbs ending in -mente

    • 7.2 Adverbs not ending in -mente

    • 7.3 Adverbial phrases

    • 7.4 Adjectives used as adverbs



  • Chapter 8 Personal pronouns

    • 8.1 Subject pronouns

    • 8.2 Direct and indirect object pronouns

    • 8.3 Prepositional object pronouns

    • 8.4 Reflexive pronouns

    • 8.5 The position and order of personal pronouns

    • 8.6 Use of le(s)in place of lo(s)and la(s)

      • adverbs Chapter 9 Indefinite adjectives, pronouns and



    • 9.1 Algo

    • 9.2 Alguien

    • 9.3 Alguno

    • 9.4 Uno

    • 9.5 Mucho, poco

    • 9.6 Bastante, suficiente

    • 9.7 Varios

    • 9.8 Demasiado

























      • 9.9 Todo

      • 9.10 Cualquiera

      • 9.11 Ambos/as

      • 9.12 Cada

      • 9.13 Solo

      • 9.14 Demás

      • 9.15 Cierto

      • 9.16 Tal, semejante

      • 9.17 Otro



    • Chapter 10 Verb forms

      • 10.1 Present indicative and present subjunctive

      • 10.2 Imperative

      • 10.3 Imperfect tense

      • 10.4 Preterite tense

      • 10.5 Imperfect subjunctive

      • 10.6 Future and conditional tenses

      • 10.7 Future subjunctive

      • 10.8 Non-finite forms

      • 10.9 Compound tenses

      • 10.10 Progressive or continuous tenses



    • Chapter 11 Uses of tenses

      • 11.1 Simple tenses

      • 11.2 Compound tenses

      • 11.3 Progressive or continuous tenses

      • 11.4 Expressions of time with hacer, desdeand llevar

      • 11.5 Verbs like gustar



    • Chapter 12 The subjunctive mood

      • 12.1 Subjunctive in subordinate queclauses

        • conjunctions 12.2 Subjunctive required by certain subordinating



      • 12.3 Subjunctive in main clauses

        • to use 12.4 The sequence of tenses – which subjunctive tense

        • subjunctive 12.5 Additional uses of the -raform of the imperfect



      • 12.6 The future subjunctive





























  • Chapter 13 Conditional clauses

    • 13.1 Use of the subjunctive after si

    • 13.2 Indicative tenses after si

    • 13.3 Conditional sentences without si



  • Chapter 14 Reflexive verbs

    • 14.1 Formation of reflexive verbs

    • 14.2 Reflexive verbs with a reflexive meaning

    • 14.3 Reflexive verbs with a reciprocal meaning

    • 14.4 Reflexive verbs with an indirect object pronoun

    • 14.5 Seas an indefinite subject

    • 14.6 Reflexive verbs ‘to get/have something done’

    • 14.7 Verbs reflexive in form but not in meaning

      • meaning 14.8 Transitive verbs used reflexively with intransitive



    • 14.9 Verbs of becoming

    • 14.10 Emphatic reflexive verbs



  • Chapter 15 Passive constructions

    • 15.1 Serand estarwith the past participle

    • 15.2 Alternatives to passive constructions



  • Chapter 16 Modal auxiliary verbs

    • 16.1 Deber

    • 16.2 Tener que

    • 16.3 Haber

    • 16.4 Querer

    • 16.5 Poder

    • 16.6 Saber

    • 16.7 Soler



  • Chapter 17 Infinitive constructions

    • 17.1 Finite verb + infinitive

    • 17.2 Prepositions + infinitive

    • 17.3 Infinitives in impersonal constructions

    • 17.4 An infinitive as the subject of a verb

    • 17.5 An infinitive with an explicit subject

    • 17.6 The infinitive as a verbal noun



























    • Chapter 18 Uses of the gerund

      • 18.1 Basic use of the gerund

      • 18.2 Gerund and main verb with different subjects

      • 18.3 Gerund in place of a relative clause

      • 18.4 Gerund with certain verbs

      • 18.5 Cases where the gerund is not used



    • Chapter 19 Commands

      • 19.1 Forms of the imperative

      • 19.2 Commands which use the present subjunctive

      • 19.3 Alternative ways of expressing commands



    • Chapter 20 Ser and estar

      • 20.1 Situations which demand ser

      • 20.2 Situations which demand estar

      • 20.3 Serand estarwith adjectives

      • 20.4 Serand estarwith past participles

      • 20.5 Special uses of estar



    • Chapter 21 Prepositions

      • 21.1 A

      • 21.2 Antes de, ante, delante de

      • 21.3 Bajo, debajo de

      • 21.4 Con

      • 21.5 Contra, en contra de

      • 21.6 De

      • 21.7 Dentro de, fuera de

      • 21.8 Desde

      • 21.9 Detrás de, tras

      • 21.10 En, encima de, sobre

      • 21.11 Enfrente de, frente a

      • 21.12 Entre

      • 21.13 Hacia, hasta

      • 21.14 Según

      • 21.15 Sin

      • 21.16 Combinations of prepositions

      • 21.17 Cuandoand dondeused as prepositions





























  • Chapter 22 Por and para

    • 22.1 Uses of por

    • 22.2 Uses of para

    • 22.3 Porand parawith estar– comparisons



  • Chapter 23 Numerals and numerical expressions

    • 23.1 Cardinal numbers

    • 23.2 Ordinal numbers

    • 23.3 Fractions

    • 23.4 Collective and multiple numerals



  • Chapter 24 Negation

    • 24.1 No

    • 24.2 Other negative words

    • 24.3 Expressions using no

    • 24.4 Spanish negatives with English affirmative meaning

    • 24.5 Affirmative phrases with negative meaning



  • Chapter 25 Relative clauses

    • clauses 25.1 Differences between Spanish and English relative

    • 25.2 Restrictive and non-restrictive relative clauses

    • 25.3 Spanish relative pronouns, adverbs and adjectives

    • 25.4 A basic system

    • 25.5 Alternatives to the basic system

    • 25.6 Focusing on words or phrases

      • ‘those who’ 25.7 Use of el queand quiento mean ‘anybody who’,



    • 25.8 Cuanto‘as much/many as’

    • 25.9 Relative clauses with infinitives

      • constructions Chapter 26 Comparative and superlative



    • 26.1 Comparisons involving adjectives or adverbs

    • 26.2 Comparisons involving nouns

    • 26.3 Comparisons involving verbs

    • 26.4 Uses of deafter másand menos

    • 26.5 Cuanto másand cuanto menos

    • 26.6 Superlative constructions

    • 26.7 Other comparative expressions

    • 26.8 Other expressions of equality – ‘the same (thing) as’



























    • Chapter 27 Questions and exclamations

      • 27.1 Subject-verb inversion

      • 27.2 Spanish interrogative words

      • 27.3 Question tags

      • 27.4 Exclamations



    • Chapter 28 Word order

      • 28.1 New versus old information

      • 28.2 Item under discussion at beginning of sentence

      • 28.3 Emphatic stress

      • 28.4 Specific constructions

      • 28.5 Position of adverbs

      • 28.6 Subject-verb inversion in questions



    • Chapter 29 Word formation

      • 29.1 Suffixes

      • 29.2 Prefixes

      • 29.3 Combinations of words

        • and Peninsular Spanis h Chapter 30 Differences between Latin American



      • 30.1 Pronunciation

      • 30.2 Forms of address

      • 30.3 Leand lo

      • 30.4 Uses of tenses

      • 30.5 El que, quienand que

      • 30.6 Vocabulary



    • Glossary

    • Index



















































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