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Intermediate

Nominalization

How verbs and adjectives become nouns in Spanish, English and Chinese.

Compare languages

English and Spanish use articles + adjective or infinitives. Chinese uses de as a universal nominalizer and places modifiers before the noun.

Examples

The good (people/things)

los buenos

What is important

lo importante

To swim is fun

Nadar es divertido

I like his singing

Me gusta su manera de cantar

The one who came

el que vino

Eating too much is bad

Comer demasiado es malo

Examples

The good (people/things)

the good

What is important

the important thing / what is important

To swim is fun

Swimming is fun / To swim is fun

I like his singing

I like his singing

The one who came

the one who came / whoever came

Eating too much is bad

Eating too much is bad

Examples

The good (people/things)

hǎode

What is important

zhòngyàode

To swim is fun

yóuyǒnghěnyǒusi

I like his singing

huanchàngde

The one who came

láiderén

Eating too much is bad

chītàiduōhǎo

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
The good (people/things) los buenosthe goodhǎode
What is important lo importantethe important thing / what is importantzhòngyàode
To swim is fun Nadar es divertidoSwimming is fun / To swim is funyóuyǒnghěnyǒusi
I like his singing Me gusta su manera de cantarI like his singinghuanchàngde
The one who came el que vinothe one who came / whoever cameláiderén
Eating too much is bad Comer demasiado es maloEating too much is badchītàiduōhǎo

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
The good (people/things) los buenosthe goodhǎode
What is important lo importantethe important thing / what is importantzhòngyàode
To swim is fun Nadar es divertidoSwimming is fun / To swim is funyóuyǒnghěnyǒusi
I like his singing Me gusta su manera de cantarI like his singinghuanchàngde
The one who came el que vinothe one who came / whoever cameláiderén
Eating too much is bad Comer demasiado es maloEating too much is badchītàiduōhǎo

Examples in context

The good (people/things)

Spanish

los buenos

English

the good

Chinese

hǎode

What is important

Spanish

lo importante

English

the important thing / what is important

Chinese

zhòngyàode

To swim is fun

Spanish

Nadar es divertido

English

Swimming is fun / To swim is fun

Chinese

yóuyǒnghěnyǒusi

I like his singing

Spanish

Me gusta su manera de cantar

English

I like his singing

Chinese

huanchàngde

The one who came

Spanish

el que vino

English

the one who came / whoever came

Chinese

láiderén

Eating too much is bad

Spanish

Comer demasiado es malo

English

Eating too much is bad

Chinese

chītàiduōhǎo

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Uses lo + adjective for abstract quality, el/la + adjective for people, and infinitives freely as subjects. Relative clauses with que nomina...

English: Uses the + adjective for classes of people, -ing forms as gerunds, infinitives as subjects, and that/wh- clauses as noun clauses.

Chinese: Uses 的de as a universal nominalizer. Any modifier + 的de can stand as a noun phrase. No articles needed.

Key concepts compared: The good (people/things), What is important, To swim is fun.

Last updated: June 4, 2026