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Intermediate B1

How To Talk About Countries And Nationalities In Spanish

No, you can’t just say “Germano” and hope to get away with it.

By Steph Koyfman

Key Takeaways

  • The article is a large vocabulary guide on how to talk about countries and nationalities in Spanish, emphasizing that nationality words behave like adjectives: they must agree in gender (australiano/a) and number (australianos/as).

  • Nationalities are not capitalized in Spanish, while country names are, which we illustrate with examples like estadounidense and coreana to set the pattern.

  • A complete list of country names in Spanish, along with their corresponding nationalities, serves as a handy reference for conversation, study, or trivia.

Think back to some of your earliest Spanish lessons. They probably involved learning how to ask someone where they're from, and also express where you live and come from. You likely already know to call yourself estadounidense if you're from the United States, or coreana if you're from Korea. But do you know how to name the rest of the countries and nationalities in Spanish?

This is vocabulary that will generally come in handy if you have your ambitions set on becoming super worldly as a Spanish speaker. Or if you're a political science major who is minoring in Spanish for your eventual career at the United Nations. You know, either of those two.

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A few housekeeping (aka grammar) rules to keep in mind:

  • Nationalities follow the same rules as adjectives in Spanish, in the sense that they must agree with the gender of the subject. An Australian man would be australiano, and an Australian woman would be australiana.

  • The nationality descriptor must also agree with the subject in a second way: singular or plural form. So if you're referring to one person, use the singular australiano. If it's a pair or group of people, they would be australianos if they're mostly men or if you're referring to the population of Australia as a whole, and australianas if they're mostly women.

  • Lastly, nationalities are not capitalized in Spanish, but country names are.

Below is a nearly complete list of the world's countries and nationalities in Spanish. Keep this cheat sheet handy for the next time you need to impress your professor, win a trivia game or generally sound like you know what you're talking about.

Countries And Nationalities In Spanish

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Steph Koyfman

Steph is a senior content producer who has spent over five years writing about language and culture for Babbel. She grew up bilingually and had an early love affair with books, and, later, studied English literature and journalism in college. She also speaks Russian and Spanish, but she’s a little rusty on those fronts.

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