My guy, estudiante and azul are adjectives, so they take the substantive’s gender. The others are femenine, but can be applied to men cuz grammatical👏 gender👏 isn’t👏 people’s👏 gender👏
Grammatically those words don’t have gender until applied to a subject which means they themselves don’t have gender if talked about in the abstract which means that the entirety of the language is not in fact gendered. Which is my point. The person you’re defending didn’t even have that knowledge.
My guy, estudiante and azul are adjectives, so they take the substantive’s gender. The others are femenine, but can be applied to men cuz grammatical👏 gender👏 isn’t👏 people’s👏 gender👏
Grammatically those words don’t have gender until applied to a subject which means they themselves don’t have gender if talked about in the abstract which means that the entirety of the language is not in fact gendered. Which is my point. The person you’re defending didn’t even have that knowledge.