This document outlines the affirmative, negative, and interrogative forms of the verb "to be" in Spanish when used with nouns. The affirmative form uses "there is/are" followed by a singular countable noun, uncountable noun, or plural noun. The negative form replaces "is/are" with "isn't/aren't" and adds "any". The interrogative form starts the sentence with "is/are" followed by the noun.
This document outlines the affirmative, negative, and interrogative forms of the verb "to be" in Spanish when used with nouns. The affirmative form uses "there is/are" followed by a singular countable noun, uncountable noun, or plural noun. The negative form replaces "is/are" with "isn't/aren't" and adds "any". The interrogative form starts the sentence with "is/are" followed by the noun.
This document outlines the affirmative, negative, and interrogative forms of the verb "to be" in Spanish when used with nouns. The affirmative form uses "there is/are" followed by a singular countable noun, uncountable noun, or plural noun. The negative form replaces "is/are" with "isn't/aren't" and adds "any". The interrogative form starts the sentence with "is/are" followed by the noun.
There is a + singular countable noun There is a fish in the bowl.
There is some + uncountable noun There is some water in the bowl. There are some + plural noun There are some vegetables in the basket. FORMA NEGATIVA There isn't a/an + singular countable noun There isn't any food on the plate. There isn't any + uncountable noun There isn't an apple on the plate. There aren't any + plural noun There aren't any fruits in the bowl. FORMA INTERROGATIVA Is there a + singular countable noun Is there a fish in the bowl? Is there any + uncountable noun Is there any water in the bowl? Are there + plural noun Are there any apples on the tree?