de los

Lemma Details

Translation: of the (masculine plural)

Part of Speech: preposition

Etymology: A contraction of the preposition 'de' (from Latin 'de' meaning 'from, concerning') and the masculine plural definite article 'los' (from Latin 'illos', accusative plural of 'ille' meaning 'that'). This combination forms the genitive construction in Spanish that indicates possession or origin of masculine plural nouns.

Commonality: 100%

Guessability: 80%

Register: neutral

Mnemonics

  • Think of 'de' as 'of' and 'los' as 'the (plural)', so 'de los' is literally 'of the'.
  • Remember that 'los' is used for masculine plural nouns, so 'de los' always precedes masculine plural nouns.

Related Words, Phrases & Idioms

de las

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No translation

del

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No translation

de la

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No translation

Cultural Context

This is one of the most fundamental grammatical constructions in Spanish, used constantly in everyday speech and writing. Unlike English, Spanish requires the article in many contexts where English would omit it.

Easily Confused With

de las

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No translation

Commonality: 0%

Explanation: 'De los' is used before masculine plural nouns, while 'de las' is used before feminine plural nouns.

Notes: The gender of the noun following 'de los/las' determines which form to use.

Mnemonic: Remember that 'los' goes with masculine nouns ending in 'o' (like 'zapatos'), while 'las' goes with feminine nouns ending in 'a' (like 'camisas').

del

Unknown

No translation

Commonality: 0%

Explanation: 'De los' is used with masculine plural nouns, while 'del' (a contraction of 'de' + 'el') is used with masculine singular nouns.

Notes: The number (singular vs. plural) of the noun determines whether to use 'del' or 'de los'.

Mnemonic: Think of 'del' as singular (one letter 'l') and 'de los' as plural (multiple letters).