Gender of Nouns and Articles In Spanish | A Clear Guide

In Spanish, all nouns are either masculine or feminine, and articles (el, la, los, las, un, una, unos, unas) must match the noun’s gender and number.

Most Spanish learners assume every noun ending in -a is feminine and every noun ending in -o is masculine. Then they run into la mano (hand) or el día (day) and the whole system seems to fall apart.

The truth is that Spanish noun genders follow consistent patterns, with a manageable set of exceptions. This guide walks you through the core rules, the tricky outliers, and how articles and adjectives mirror the gender of every noun you use.

The Basic Rule: -O And -A Endings

For people and animals, grammatical gender usually matches biological sex. Madre (mother) is feminine; padre (father) is masculine. BBC Bitesize explains that Spanish nouns have gender and that the pattern extends to objects.

Most masculine nouns end in -o: el libro (book), el carro (car). Most feminine nouns end in -a: la cama (bed), la idea (idea). This rule covers the vast majority of common nouns.

What About Inanimate Objects?

There is no logic to why a table (la mesa) is feminine and a desk (el escritorio) is masculine. You simply learn each noun with its article. The endings are your best shortcut for new vocabulary.

Why These Patterns Make Sense

English has no grammatical gender, so the whole concept can feel arbitrary. But Spanish genders cluster around recognizable endings, and knowing them drastically cuts down on guessing.

  • -ción and -sión endings: Almost always feminine. La canción (song), la televisión (television).
  • -dad and -tad endings: Also feminine. La ciudad (city), la libertad (freedom).
  • -l, -n, -r, -s endings: Often masculine. El sol (sun), el pan (bread), el amor (love), el mes (month).
  • -z endings: Frequently feminine. La paz (peace), la luz (light). But watch for el lápiz (pencil).
  • -e endings: Wild card. Some are masculine (el coche, car) and some feminine (la noche, night). These need memorization.

These patterns eliminate most of the uncertainty. When you see an -ión or -dad noun, you can be confident it’s feminine. Consonant endings lean masculine but aren’t guaranteed.

Exceptions That Break The Patterns

Some -a nouns are masculine, and a few -o nouns are feminine. The most common masculine -a nouns come from Greek and end in -ma: el problema (problem), el tema (theme), el sistema (system), el poema (poem). El día (day) and el mapa (map) are also famously masculine.

On the feminine side: la mano (hand), la radio (radio), la foto (photo), and la moto (motorcycle). These are often abbreviations or Latin holdouts.

There is also the el agua rule: feminine nouns that begin with a stressed a- or ha- sound use el in the singular for pronunciation, even though the noun stays feminine. So you say el agua (water) but las aguas (waters). LawlessSpanish’s list of masculine nouns ending in -a includes dozens of these exceptions.

Noun Gender Meaning
el día Masculine day
la mano Feminine hand
el mapa Masculine map
la radio Feminine radio
el tema Masculine theme
la foto Feminine photo
el programa Masculine program
la moto Feminine motorcycle

Memorize these high-frequency exceptions early. They show up constantly in conversation and will trip you up if you rely only on the -o/-a rule.

How Articles And Adjectives Agree With Gender

Once you know a noun’s gender, every article and adjective that modifies it must match. This agreement is non-negotiable in Spanish grammar.

  1. Definite articles: Use el and los for masculine nouns; la and las for feminine nouns. Example: el perro (the dog), la casa (the house).
  2. Indefinite articles: un/unos for masculine, una/unas for feminine. Un libro (a book), una mesa (a table).
  3. Adjective endings: Most adjectives end in -o for masculine and -a for feminine. Un chico alto, una chica alta.
  4. Invariable adjectives: Some adjectives like inteligente or feliz don’t change for gender, only number. Un hombre feliz, una mujer feliz.
  5. Color adjectives: Most change gender (rojo/roja), but a few like naranja never do.

Getting the article right forces you to choose the correct adjective ending, so always learn a noun with its article from day one. This habit alone will prevent most gender errors.

Learning The Gender Of Unknown Nouns

When you meet a new word, take a two-step approach. First, look at the ending. If it ends in -o, -l, -n, -r, or -s, guess masculine. If it ends in -a, -ción, -sión, -dad, or -tad, guess feminine. If it ends in -e or a consonant, you need to check a dictionary or remember the article.

Second, listen for the article in authentic speech. Native speakers always use el or la before nouns, so hearing la ciudad or el problema reinforces the correct gender. Reading texts with bolded articles also helps.

Per the adjective agreement with gender page on Wikipedia, adjectives must match the noun in gender and number, which reinforces the pattern every time you describe something. The article you use before the noun dictates the entire phrase’s agreement.

Ending Likely Gender Examples
-o Masculine libro, carro, hermano
-a Feminine cama, idea, hermana
-ción / -sión Feminine canción, televisión
-dad / -tad Feminine ciudad, libertad
-ma (Greek origin) Often masculine problema, tema, sistema
-e Either coche (M), noche (F)
Consonant Either sol (M), paz (F)

This quick reference covers roughly 80–most Spanish nouns. The remaining exceptions are common enough that you’ll learn them naturally through reading and listening practice.

The Bottom Line

Spanish noun gender is not random. The -o/-a rule handles most nouns, and endings like -ción, -dad, and -ma give strong clues. Exceptions like la mano and el día are few, so learn them early and your articles and adjectives will fall into place.

If you’re preparing for the DELE exam or taking a structured course, a certified Spanish teacher (DELE examiner or ELE specialist) can help you internalize these patterns faster through targeted practice tailored to your current level and learning goals.

References & Sources

  • Lawlessspanish. “Gender Exceptions” Some nouns ending in *-a* are masculine, such as *el día* (day), *el mapa* (map), and *el problema* (problem).
  • Wikipedia. “Grammatical Gender in Spanish” The gender of a noun determines the form of adjectives that modify it; adjectives must agree in gender and number with the noun.