1. Gender:Spanish has masculine and feminine genders. The gender affects nouns, adjectives, demonstratives, possessives and articles, but not verbs. 2. Plurals:Generally speaking, the plural is formed by adding '-s' to words ending in a vowel and by adding '-os' or '-es' to words endin...
In Spanish the case system of Latin has been completely lost except for subject and object forms for pronouns. Nouns are marked for masculine or feminine gender, and plurals are marked by the addition of -s or -es; adjectives change endings to agree with nouns. The verb system is complex ...
2. Materials and Methods This study is based upon the reflection and observation of a rather large database (N = 4995) of haber,‘to be’, existential constructions in European Spanish gathered from the Audible Corpus of Spoken Rural Spanish (henceforth COSER, after its translation in Spanish)...