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Ambigüas

Ambigüas is the feminine plural form of the Spanish adjective ambigua, meaning that something is unclear or open to more than one interpretation. It is used to describe feminine plural nouns, as in phrases like interpretaciones ambigüas or situaciones ambigüas. The term appears in discussions of language, law, philosophy, and literature when a statement, rule, or situation cannot be determined unambiguously.

Etymology and related forms

Ambigua derives from Latin ambiguus, and the Spanish form evolved through historical developments in the Romance

Usage and nuances

As an adjective, ambigüas agrees in gender and number with the noun it modifies. It is commonly

See also

- Ambigüedad

- Ambigüo (masculine form)

- Ambiguo (neutral/unclear in some contexts)

- Abstruso

- Interpretación

Note: Spelling conventions for this adjective can differ by style guide; some sources may prefer ambigüas,

language
family.
The
plural
feminine
form
is
ambigüas
(as
a
general
rule
in
many
varieties
of
Spanish),
aligning
with
the
usual
pattern
for
adjectives
ending
in
-a
in
the
singular.
Cognates
exist
in
other
Romance
languages,
such
as
Portuguese
ambígua
and
Italian
ambigua,
reflecting
a
shared
Latin
origin.
used
in
academic,
legal,
and
critical
writing
to
describe
statements,
interpretations,
rules,
or
conditions
that
lack
clear
or
single
meaning.
The
choice
between
ambigüas
and
ambíguas
or
ambigua-related
forms
can
vary
by
regional
orthography
and
stylistic
guidelines,
but
ambigüas
serves
as
the
standard
feminine
plural
form
in
many
contemporary
usages.
while
others
note
editions
with
diacritics
to
indicate
pronunciation
in
specific
readings.