Basic Adjectives in Basque
Oinarrizko Izenondoak
Overview
Adjectives in Basque behave differently from English in two important ways. First, adjectives come after the noun, not before it. Second, the definite article suffix attaches to the adjective (the last element of the noun phrase), not to the noun itself. So "the big house" is etxe handia — where etxe (house) has no suffix and handia (big + article) carries the -a.
The great news for A1 learners is that Basque has no grammatical gender, so adjectives never change form to agree with masculine or feminine nouns. You simply learn one form of each adjective and use it with everything. The only variation is singular versus plural: etxe handia (the big house) vs. etxe handiak (the big houses).
Basque adjectives are straightforward to use once you internalize the noun-adjective order and the article placement rule. Common adjectives you will need right away include handia (big), txikia (small), ona (good), txarra (bad), zaharra (old), berria (new), ederra (beautiful), and polita (pretty).
How It Works
| Pattern | Structure | Example | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definite singular | noun + adjective + -a | etxe handia | the big house |
| Definite plural | noun + adjective + -ak | etxe handiak | the big houses |
| Indefinite | noun + adjective + bat | etxe handi bat | a big house |
| Predicate | noun-a + adjective + da | etxea handia da | the house is big |
Common adjectives:
| Basque | English | Basque | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| handia | big | txikia | small |
| ona | good | txarra | bad |
| zaharra | old | berria | new |
| ederra | beautiful | itsusia | ugly |
| luzea | long | laburra | short |
| gorria | red | zuria | white |
Key points:
- No gender agreement — adjectives have one form
- The article (-a/-ak) goes on the last word of the noun phrase
- Multiple adjectives stack after the noun: etxe handi gorria (the big red house)
Examples in Context
| Basque | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| etxe handia | the big house | Article on adjective |
| auto gorria | the red car | Colour as adjective |
| Sagarra txikia da. | The apple is small. | Predicate adjective |
| Liburu interesgarria da. | It is an interesting book. | After the noun |
| Gizon altua ikusi dut. | I have seen the tall man. | In object position |
| Neska gazteak hemen dira. | The young girls are here. | Plural adjective |
| Kafe ona nahi dut. | I want a good coffee. | With indefinite meaning |
| Eguraldia txarra da. | The weather is bad. | Common expression |
| Irakasle berria da. | He/She is the new teacher. | Predicate use |
| Film luze bat ikusi dugu. | We have watched a long film. | Indefinite with bat |
Common Mistakes
Placing the adjective before the noun
- Wrong: handia etxea
- Right: etxe handia
- Why: In Basque, adjectives always follow the noun. The order is noun + adjective.
Putting the article on the noun instead of the adjective
- Wrong: etxea handi
- Right: etxe handia
- Why: The definite article suffix (-a/-ak) attaches to the last element of the noun phrase, which is the adjective.
Trying to make adjectives agree with gender
- Wrong: Looking for masculine/feminine forms
- Right: Use the same adjective form regardless of the noun
- Why: Basque has no grammatical gender. One adjective form works for everything.
Practice Tips
- Pick five objects you see daily and describe them with adjectives in Basque. Practice the noun + adjective + article pattern: auto gorria, liburu handia, katu beltza.
- Practice switching between singular and plural: etxe handia (the big house) → etxe handiak (the big houses). Notice only the article suffix changes.
Related Concepts
Prerequisite
Articles and Determiners in BasqueA1Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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