Asked by a
Which rules apply when Spanish adjectives modify nouns in a sentence?
(Select the two correct answers.)
(4 points)
Responses
The adjective must not agree with the noun.
The adjective must not agree with the noun.
Adjectives always come before the noun, like in English.
Adjectives always come before the noun, like in English.
Adjectives never change their form.
Adjectives never change their form.
The adjective must agree with the noun's number.
The adjective must agree with the noun's number.
The adjective must agree with the noun's gender.
The adjective must agree with the noun's gender.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The correct answers are:
- The adjective must agree with the noun's number.
- The adjective must agree with the noun's gender.
(Spanish adjectives normally change form to match the noun's gender — masculine/feminine — and number — singular/plural.)
- The adjective must agree with the noun's number.
- The adjective must agree with the noun's gender.
(Spanish adjectives normally change form to match the noun's gender — masculine/feminine — and number — singular/plural.)
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.