Adjective
Adjectives are words that describe or modify nouns and pronouns, providing additional information about their characteristics, qualities or attributes. They agree in gender and number with the nouns they describe.
Adverb
Adverbs describe verbs and adjectives. They give important information, such as how something is done. In English, adverbs are usually words that end in -ly. Spanish adverbs typically end in -mente.
Article
Articles are small words that define or introduce nouns. They show whether the noun is specific or general. Spanish articles can be definite or indefinite, and must agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun they modify.
Miscellaneous
Words and grammar concepts labeled as "Miscellaneous" do not neatly fall under common categories like 'noun' or 'Verb.'
Mood
Mood refers to the way verbs express the attitude or intention of the speaker toward the action. There are three moods in Spanish: indicative, subjunctive and imperative.
Noun
Nouns are words we use to name people, places, objects, ideas or feelings. Spanish nouns can be either masculine or feminine and singular or plural.
Preposition
Prepositions are words that link nouns, pronouns or phrases to other parts of a sentence, showing relationships such as location, time, direction or cause.
Pronoun
Pronouns are words that replace nouns in a sentence. They refer to people, places, things or ideas without repeating their names.
Verb
Verbs are words that express actions, states and conditions. They undergo conjugation according to the subject, tense and mood.