Language/French/Grammar/Definite-and-indefinite-articles

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Definite and indefinite articles in French - le, la, les, un, une, des

 

What is an article?[edit | edit source]

Names are almost always accompanied by an article or another determinant.

This indicates the gender of the name (male or female) and the number (singular or plural).

There are definite articles (le, la, les) and indefinite articles (un, une, des).

Examples:

  • Léna est une copine de Lara et la copine de François.
  • Léna a acheté une glace. Elle aime beaucoup la glace.

 

When to use the indefinite article in French?[edit | edit source]

The form of the indefinite article is a masculine singular and a feminine singular.

There is also an indefinite plural article: "de" (this form remains the same for the masculine and the feminine).

The indefinite article is used when:

We talk about a thing or an indeterminate person.[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Léna est une copine de Lara. (one among several)

Something is mentioned for the first time in a text (introductory value).[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Léna a acheté une glace.

Info:

If the name is preceded by an adjective, the plural undefined article des becomes de.

Example:

  • Léna et Lara ont acheté de bonnes glaces.

When to use the article defined in French?[edit | edit source]

The form of the definite article is "le" in the masculine singular, "la" in the feminine singular ("l’" when the next word begins with a vowel) and "les" (feminine and masculine).

The definite article is used:

When you designate a thing or a particular person.[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Léna est la copine de François.

When referring to a person or thing already identified or when a generalization is made.[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Elle éteint la lumière.

After "aimer, adorer, préférer, détester"[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Elle adore les chevaux.

How to contract articles and prepositions?[edit | edit source]

The definite article and the preposition which precedes it contract and form only one word:

Preposition Preposition + article Example
à à + le = au la glace au chocolat
à à + les = aux fais attention aux enfants
de de + le = du parler du jeu
de de + les = des c’est la table des enfants

What is the partitive article?[edit | edit source]

When referring to an indeterminate quantity taken from a whole, we use the partitive article "du" (masculine), "de la" (female).

There is no plural.

The partitive article is used, to designate:

Non-quantifiable things that can not be counted.[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Il faut acheter de l'eau et du café.

Different sports (with "faire") and musical instruments.[edit | edit source]

Examples:

  • Il fait du foot.
  • Il joue de la flûte.

When should not I use an article?[edit | edit source]

The article is omitted in the following cases:

Names of cities[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Ils habitent à Paris.

Days of the week[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Nous l’avons vu lundi.

Months[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Je suis né en juillet.

Constructions of the type en + means of transport[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • As-tu voyagé en train ou en voiture ?

Jobs in a general context[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Elle est laborantine.

Exception: to designate a concrete person:[edit | edit source]

  • Je connais la laborantine.

Exception: to designate a particularity :[edit | edit source]

  • C’est une bonne laborantine.

Religions[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Il est catholique.

Exception: to designate a concrete person:[edit | edit source]

  • C’est le catholique qui va tous les jours à l'église.

Exception: to designate a a particularity :[edit | edit source]

  • C’est un bon catholique.

If the partitive article is necessary, "de" must be used without article in the following cases:

with the quantitative data, except "bien", "la plupar", "une partie", "la majorité" and "la moitié"[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • J’ai bu beaucoup de café.

after the negation[edit | edit source]

Example:

  • Il n’a plus d'eau dans son verre.

On the other hand, with some verbs and expressions built with "de", there is no article.[edit | edit source]

Examples:

  • J’ai besoin d’argent.
  • J’ai envie de fraises.

Sources[edit | edit source]

https://francais.lingolia.com/fr/grammaire/articles

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