The opposite in meaning to the given words is:
- Rico: <u>Pobre</u>
- Bueno: <u>Malo</u>
- Largo: <u>Corto</u>
- Delgado: <u>Grueso</u>
- Grande: <u>Pequeño</u>
- Serio: <u>Informal</u>
- Liberal: <u>Conservador</u>
- Paciente: <u>Impaciente</u>
- Tonto: <u>Astuto</u>
- Viejo: <u>Joven</u>
- Daniela es <u>inteligente</u> y <u>trabajadora</u>.
- María y Anna son <u>jóvenes</u> y <u>optimistas</u>.
- Alberto es <u>guapo</u> y<u> amable</u>.
- Laura y Paco son <u>morenos</u> y <u>serios</u>.
- Carlos y Luis son <u>ricos</u> y <u>generosos</u>.
<h3><em>
Adjectives</em><em> in </em><em>
Spanish</em><em>.</em></h3>
This type of words refers to those that characterize nouns, either in their shape, color, size, mood, among many others, with the characteristic that it must correspond to both gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun it characterizes, for example with the adjective "trabajador:"
- <em>Trabajador:</em> singular masculine.
- <em>Trabajadores:</em> masculine plural.
- <u><em>Trabajadora</em></u><em>:</em> singular feminine.
- <em>Trabajadoras:</em> feminine plural.
Due to the changes that an adjective undergoes when its gender and number vary, this is essential when using it properly.
More information about Adjectives in Spanish:
brainly.com/question/10891850
1 = A
2 = B
3 = B
4 = A
i dont know about the bottom part