The most important Spanish nouns to learn may differ based on your needs as a Spanish language learner. An IT engineer working with Latin American teams will need to learn different Spanish nouns than a liberal arts student studying abroad.
Beginner classes often emphasize phrases like, ¿Dónde está la biblioteca? (Where is the library?). But most adult learners will never ask this question out loud, because we have smartphones to direct us. We wanted to break the tradition of learning useless words and phrases, so we’ve compiled the most common and useful Spanish noun list possible.
So, what are the most common Spanish nouns? To find out, we ran a textual analysis of four short stories and four news articles in Spanish. We then grouped the most-mentioned Spanish nouns into the following categories:
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A quick note about the gender of Spanish nouns
Before we jump right in, remember that nouns in Spanish have a gender. That’s right: la mesa (the table) is feminine while el baño (the toilet) is masculine. Masculine nouns in Spanish have the definite article el’ and usually end in the letter “o,” as in el baño. Feminine nouns in Spanish have the article la and usually end in the letter “a,” as in la mesa.
Places
la casa – the houseel restaurante – the restaurantel apartamento – the apartmentel lago – the lakeel camino – the roadel bosque – the forestla plaza – the town square or shopping mallla ciudad – the cityel banco – the bankel mercado – the market (this can also refer to a financial market)el estado – the stateel país – the countryPeople
la mujer – the womanel hombre – the manla hermana/el hermano – the sister/the brotherla madre – the motherel padre – the fatherel señor/la señora – the sir/the madam; when capitalized, el Señor is the Christian word for “the Lord”la familia – the familyel grupo – the groupel candidato – the candidatela guardia – the guardel caballero – the gentlemanla dama – the ladyla persona – the personel conductor – the driverel amigo/la amiga – the friend (masculine/feminine)Transport
el camión – the truck or bus* (only for Mexico)el autobús – the busel coche/el carro/el auto – the car (depending on the country)la bicicleta – the bicycleel cargamento – the cargoel equipaje – the luggageAnimals
la criatura – the creatureel animal – the animalel perro – the dogel gato – the catGoods and materials
la madera – the woodel oro – the goldla gasolina – the gasolineTime
el año – the yearel mes – the monthel día – the dayel momento – the momentTechnology
la Televisión – the TVel teléfono/móvil/celular – the phone/mobile/cell phone (depending on the country)el número – the numberla foto – the photolas redes sociales – the social media networksLearn languages at your pace
Food
la comida/el alimento – the foodel agua – the waterel frijol – the beanel arroz – the ricela carne – the meat or beeflos vegetales – the vegetableslas frutas – the fruitLife and events
las noticias – the newslas experiencias – the experienceslas propuestas – the proposalsla pobreza – the povertyel desafío – the challengela economía – the economyla política – politicsla salud – healthlas elecciones – the electionsla pandemia – the pandemicla crisis – the crisisla fuerza – the force/strengthla muerte – deathla vida – lifeThe body
el pie – the footla cabeza – the headel brazo – the armel pecho – the chestel estómago – the stomachla pierna – the legla sonrisa – the smilela derecha – the rightla izquierda – the leftClothing
la chaqueta – the jacketlos pantalones – the pantsla camisa – the shirtla ropa interior – the underwearla gorra – the hatlos zapatos – the shoesThe household
la caja – the boxla puerta – the doorel baño – the bathroomel cuarto –the bedroomla cocina – the kitchenla cosa – the thingla parrilla – the grillla mesa – the tableel sofá – the sofa/couchla cama – the bedel garaje – the garageCommunication
la información – the informationla pregunta – the questionla carta – the letterel correo electrónico – the emailel mensaje – the messageSpanish nouns for daily life
You’ll likely need these Spanish nouns to get around in your daily life, and especially when holding a conversation on current events. A textual analysis of typical Spanish writing indicates that these Spanish nouns are among the most common. No more obscure words taking up space in your memory — just useful terms you can try using today. What are you waiting for? Learn these 101 nouns in Spanish to jump-start your vocabulary!
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Alison Maciejewski Cortez
Alison Maciejewski Cortez is Chilean-American, born and raised in California. She studied abroad in Spain, has lived in multiple countries, and now calls Mexico home. She believes that learning how to order a beer in a new language reveals a lot about local culture. Alison speaks English, Spanish, and Thai fluently and studies Czech and Turkish. Her tech copywriting business takes her around the world and she is excited to share language tips as part of the Lingoda team. Follow her culinary and cultural experiences on X.
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