Basics Language Learning

Basic Colors in Spanish

Colors are some of the first and most useful words to learn in Spanish.
They appear everywhere: describing objects, clothes, food, places, and people.

Features:

  • The most common colors in Spanish
  • How color words behave grammatically
  • Common beginner mistakes to avoid
  • How to practice colors naturally
  • Play a game (below if you want to do it now)


🌈 The most common colors in Spanish

Basic Colors in Spanish

English Spanish Color
white blanco
black negro
red rojo
blue azul
green verde
yellow amarillo
orange naranja
pink rosa
purple morado
brown marrΓ³n
gray gris
Tip: Most color words behave like adjectives in Spanish (they often change for gender/number). This table shows the base form.

πŸ‘‰ These are the core colors you’ll use most often in daily Spanish.


Important rule #1: Colors usually change with gender and number

Most Spanish colors work like adjectives.
That means they agree with the noun they describe.

Example:

  • el coche rojo β†’ the red car
  • la casa roja β†’ the red house
  • los coches rojos β†’ the red cars
  • las casas rojas β†’ the red houses

Important rule #2: Some colors do NOT change gender

Colors that end in –e or a consonant usually do not change for gender, only for plural.

These colors stay the same for masculine & feminine:

  • azul
  • verde
  • gris
  • marrΓ³n

Examples:

  • el coche azul
  • la casa azul
  • los coches azules
  • las casas azules

Important rule #3: Plural forms

To make colors plural:

  • Add -s if the word ends in a vowel
  • Add -es if it ends in a consonant

Examples:

  • rojo β†’ rojos
  • verde β†’ verdes
  • azul β†’ azules
  • gris β†’ grises

Common beginner mistakes

❌ la casa rojo
βœ… la casa roja

❌ los coches azul
βœ… los coches azules

❌ marrónes
βœ… marrones


Special note: orange, pink, and brown

Some colors can behave a bit differently:

  • naranja
    • Often stays the same: camisa naranja
  • rosa
    • Can change or stay the same depending on usage
  • marrΓ³n
    • Plural: marrones

Don’t overthink these at the beginning β€” exposure matters more than rules here.


How to practice colors effectively

βœ”οΈ Say the color out loud
βœ”οΈ Describe objects around you
βœ”οΈ Combine color + noun every time
βœ”οΈ Learn them in short phrases, not lists

Examples:

  • una camisa azul
  • dos coches negros
  • una manzana roja
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