Are there any tips to quickly identify words in Spanish as 'male' or 'female'?
I am a new learner and have trouble with this.
Spanish Language Stack Exchange is a question and answer site for linguists, teachers, students and Spanish language enthusiasts in general wanting to discuss the finer points of the language. It only takes a minute to sign up.
Sign up to join this communityAs Trevor says, there's a general rule that states that nouns:
a
are feminine o
are masculineHowever, there are exceptions, and as usual with languages, those exceptions often happen in very common words, e.g. "mano" which ends in "o" but is feminine.
Then you have words with different endings (in other vowels, in consonants...) and those can be either masculine or feminine. There's no rule for them:
la leche / el coche
el camión / la canción
la ley / el buey
Also, you have to be aware that there are words which are feminine but take a masculine article. Those are words that start with an stressed "a" sound (agua, águila, hacha, hambre, aula...) and the masculine article is used to avoid cacophony. (Full explanation in Spanish in the Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas)
These words, when used in singular, and introduced by an article, take the "el" article (or the indefinite article "un"):
el agua, el águila, un hacha, el aula
But they are feminine and should be used as such in all the other cases (in plural or when the word before the noun is not an article):
las aguas, unas águilas, mucha hambre, esta hacha, la bella águila
Many native speakers get this wrong and say things like mucho hambre, este agua...
So, it's not at all easy. As Trevor says in his answer, you'll have to learn them and they will end up sounding right.
For completeness, there are also a few words which can be both masculine or feminine (they are called nombres ambiguos): azúcar, arte, enzima, mar, margen... In general, those can be used as either masculine or feminine, but in some cases, the masculine is used in some cases and the feminine in others. For example, mar is generally used as masculine, but people related with the sea (sailors, fishers, etc.) often use it as feminine.
Marcial Prado's book "Practical Spanish Grammar" offers this mnemonic for determining noun gender:
Nouns ending in L-O-N-E-R-S are generally masculine (97%). Examples: un papel, un libro, un tren, un garaje, un color, un lunes Some exceptions: una calle, una clase, una llave, una mano, una muerte, una noche, una suerte, una tarde
Nouns ending in D-IÓN-Z-A are generally feminine (98%). Examples: una pared, una lección, una luz, una nariz, una mesa Some exceptions: un avión, un camión, un día, un lápiz
These are not absolute rules, but they will be right a very high percentage of the time.
Also note that there are a group of nouns ending in -ma, which in many cases are masculine. Examples: un problema, un tema, un programa, un dilema, un drama, un poema
Unfortunately, there are no hard and fast rules. These are pretty good, but you'll just have to memorize the exceptions.
There are a few general rules. For example, nouns ending with the letter "a" are generally feminine.
But in the long-term the best way to master this is two fold: (1) memorize the article when you learn the definition, and (2) read and listen to the language as much as possible.
Eventually the correct article will naturally sound "right."
First, do not think about nouns as male and female. Nouns are either masculine or feminine. Most (but not all) nouns referring to male human beings and domestic animals are masculine, and most nouns referring to female human beings and domestic animals are feminine.
So, the first rule: if the noun refers to a male domestic animal (toro: bull), some male popular animal (león: lion), or male human being (papá: dad) the word is masculine. Female counterparts (vaca: cow, leona: lioness, mamá: mom) the word is feminine. Exceptions are rare, and mostly slangy, such as bombón (lollipop) used as slang for a beautiful woman (peach), is still a masculine word: Ese bombón está muy bueno.
If the word has a declination ending in -a, then that declination is feminine and the other is masculine: señor/señora, lobo/loba, presidente/presidenta, juez/jueza, modisto/modista. However, sometimes the non-declined form (presidente, juez) can be both feminine and masculine. This is particularly true with professions and titles that end in -e or consonant.
So, other than human beings and some common animals, each noun is either masculine or feminine, with no relation to biological sex. The general rules are:
Nouns ending in -a are feminine. Except:
Abstract nouns ending in -ción or -sión are feminine. Non-abstract nouns ending in -ión are usually masculine (camión, avión).
Most nouns ending in -z and -d are feminine. With several exceptions, such as un lápiz, un alud, el Talmud.
Most other nouns are masculine, but beware the exceptions.
Proper nouns used as common nouns usually adopt the grammatical gender of the tacit accompanying common noun: el Elba (for el río Elba).
Some nouns are gender ambiguous; that means that they can be masculine or feminine, according to dialect or stylistic preference. Words such as mar and calor are masculine in most modern dialects (el mar, el calor), however in some isolated conservative dialects (usually deemed uncultured), and in poetic language, they can adopt a feminine gender (la mar, la calor).
Some nouns have masculine and feminine variants with different meanings, such as policía, where la policía is the police force, and el policía is a policeman. (however, a policewoman would be la policía as well).