Spanish 101 · Grammar

Emotions and Adjectives in Spanish

A focused summary for Spanish 101, with patterns you can drill with the examples and questions on this page.

The rule

Spanish rewards memorizing whole phrases, not just glosses: notice how articles, gender, and verb endings travel together.

When English uses one word order, Spanish may use another — object pronouns, questions, and negation follow textbook placement rules.

If your course grades accents, treat them as part of spelling: they distinguish meanings (tu/tú, si/sí) and verb tense or person.

Your instructor's charts and target dialect win on quiz day; this guide follows common US introductory programs.

Necesito repasar antes del examen.I need to review before the exam.

¿Nos vemos en la biblioteca?Shall we meet at the library?

Examples in context

Ella es médica.She is a doctor (profession).ser — profession
Madrid es la capital de España.Madrid is the capital of Spain.ser — classification
Son las cuatro y cuarto.It is four fifteen.ser — clock time
Estoy cansado hoy.I am tired today (temporary state).estar — condition
El libro está en la mesa.The book is on the table.estar — location
La tienda está cerrada.The shop is closed (resultant state).estar — resultant state
Mi hermano es alto.My brother is tall (inherent trait).ser — trait
Estamos en clase.We are in class.estar — location

Quick reference

Daily bite

Ten focused minutes beat one panic session the night before.

Pronunciation

Say new vocabulary aloud so gender and stress stick.

Review loop

Mix short grammar reads with writing your own sentences so patterns stick.

Common mistakes

Using ser for location

❌ Wrong: ¿Dónde es el baño?

✅ Correct: ¿Dónde está el baño?

Location of things and people uses estar, not ser.

Using estar for profession

❌ Wrong: Estoy profesor.

✅ Correct: Soy profesor.

Profession and identity use ser.

Using estar for clock time

❌ Wrong: Están las tres.

✅ Correct: Son las tres.

Clock time uses ser: son las…

Mixing up bored meanings

❌ Wrong: Ella es aburrida. (when you mean bored)

✅ Correct: Ella está aburrida.

Aburrido with estar often means bored; with ser it means boring.

Practice questions

Test what you just learned. Select an answer to see instant feedback.

Question 1 of 5

Which fits best? “Ana _____ muy nerviosa antes del examen.”

Question 2 of 5

Clock time: “_____ las tres y media.”

Question 3 of 5

Location: “¿Dónde _____ el libro?”

Question 4 of 5

Profession: “Mi hermana _____ médica.”

Question 5 of 5

Event frame: “La clase _____ a las diez.”

Want more practice on Emotions and Adjectives in Spanish?

Chapurra has 50 questions like these, organized by chapter. Capítulo Preliminar is free.

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FAQ

Is estar always for “temporary” and ser for “permanent”?
That shortcut breaks quickly. Location uses estar even when it lasts years (México está en América). Events and clock time often use ser (La clase es a las diez; Son las tres). Think “definition or classification” versus “where something is or how it is right now,” not a timer.
Why does the same adjective with ser vs. estar change the English meaning?
Spanish often uses ser + adjective for a stable trait or category and estar + the same adjective for a passing state or impression. Classic pairs include aburrido (boring vs. bored), listo (clever vs. ready), and bueno (good vs. tasty or “well behaved” in context). Your textbook will list the most common shifts.
Do I use ser or estar with past participles like cerrado?
For resultant states (“closed,” “broken,” “written”), Spanish usually uses estar: La tienda está cerrada. Passive sentences with an agent (fue escrita por…) are a separate, more advanced pattern. In first-year courses, estar + participle for state is the pattern you drill most.
Which verb do I use for profession or major?
Identity and category take ser: Soy estudiante, Ella es ingeniera. Estar would signal a staged or unusual reading, not a neutral job title. If you are stating what someone “is” in a definitional way, start with ser.
How do I choose when both ser and estar seem possible?
Ask whether you are locating the subject, describing a current condition or result, or using a progressive (estar + gerund). If instead you are classifying, giving origin, telling time, or framing a scheduled event, ser is more likely. When in doubt, say the sentence aloud with both verbs and pick the one native speakers use in parallel examples from class.