Spanish Indefinite Words

Spanish Indefinite Words

Sometimes you don’t exactly know what you want to refer to. It could be something, someone, or anyone, for that matter.

These sorts of words are indefinite words. Spanish has them just as English does.

  • algo "something / anything"
  • alguien "someone / somebody"
  • alguna vez "sometime"
  • alguno/a "some / any"
  • cualquier/a "whichever / whatever"

Note that algo and alguien never change forms--there is NO such thing as algos or alguienes. However, alguno and cualquier do change forms according to gender. Alguno also changes form according to quantity (in which case it translates as “several”).

Understanding Indefinite Words used in Spanish

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Algo pasó en el banco.
Something happened in the bank.
Alguna vez en mi vida, quiero volar en un avión pequeño.
Sometime in my life, (I) would like to fly in a small plane.
Alguien está en mi cuarto.
Someone is in my room.
¿Cuál bebida te gusta? —No me importa; cualquiera está bien para mí.
Which drink do (you) like? —(I) don't care; whichever is fine for me.
Vamos a llevar algunos en caso de emergencia.
(We) are going to take several in case of emergency.

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Some other useful words along this vein are:
  • siempre "always"
  • también "also / too"
Por ejemplo:
Héctor siempre va al colegio en bus.
Hector always goes to the high school by bus.

Understanding Negative Words

Perhaps, though, you don’t want to talk about somebody or something. Perhaps you prefer to talk about nobody and nothing. These are negative indefinite words. In Spanish, there is a word with exactly the opposite meaning for each of the positive words you learned above.

Positive IndefiniteNegative Indefinite
algo "something / anything"nada "nothing"
alguien "someone / anyone"nadie "no one / nobody"
algún "some"ningún "not any / none"
cualquier "any / some"ninguno(a) "neither one"
simpre "always"nunca / jamás "never"
también "also / too"tampoco "neither / not either"

Forming negatives in Spanish can be tricky. Sometimes you can form a negative sentence in Spanish just as you would in English.

Por ejemplo:

Jamás he jugado fútbol.
(I) have never played soccer.
Yo tampoco.
Me neither.
Nadie tiene ganas de salir.
No one feels like going out.

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There’s another way of forming negative sentences; however, this involves placing the word no before the verb (make sure that you do NOT place it before the subject).

If you want to add a negative indefinite word like “nobody” or “nothing” to a negative sentence, you’re going to have to unlearn some English grammar!

Remember how you learned in school that you should never say things like…

  • "I ain’t never done it."
  • "He don’t know nothing."
  • "There isn’t no one here."

These are called double negatives... and they’re perfectly fine in Spanish!

  • No lo he hecho nunca.
  • Él no sabe nada.
  • No hay nadie aquí.

In fact, you have to form double negatives in Spanish, because that’s the proper way to form those sentences grammatically.

Por ejemplo:

No tengo nada.
I have nothing.

Hope that helped! See you in the next lesson on Spanish nouns!

Check out Spanish grammarfor more useful info! Here are some recommended lessons:

Mauricio Evlampieff: Rocket Spanish

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