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FRENCH ARTICLES AND DETERMINERS


In French, articles and determiners are required on almost every common noun; much more so than in English. They are inflected to agree in gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) with the noun they determine, though most have only one plural form (for masculine and feminine). Many also often change form when the word that follows them begins with a vowel sound.
While articles are actually a subclass of determiners, and determiners are in turn a subclass of adjectives, they are generally treated separately; thus, they are treated separately here as well.

Contents
Articles
The definite article
The indefinite article
The partitive article
Determiners
Possessive determiners
Demonstrative determiners
Interrogative determiners
Quantifiers

Articles


French has three articles: a ''definite article'', somewhat analogous to English ''the''; an ''indefinite article'', somewhat analogous to English ''a'' or ''an'', except that it has a plural form; and a ''partitive article'', somewhat analogous to English ''some''.
The definite article

The French definite article is analogous to the English definite article ''the''. Like ''the'', the French definite article is used with a noun referring to a specific item when both the speaker and the audience know what the item is; so, « J'ai cassé 'la' chaise rouge » ("I broke 'the' red chair"). Unlike ''the'', the French definite article is also used with mass nouns and plural nouns with generic interpretation, and with abstract nouns. For example:

★ « J'aime 'le' lait. » ("I like milk.")

★ « J'aime 'les' romans. » ("I like novels.")

★ « 'Le' capitalisme a transformé ce pays. » (Capitalism has transformed this country.")
The definite article takes the following forms:

★ singular:


★ before a consonant:



★ masculine: ''le''1



★ feminine: ''la''


★ before a vowel or a mute ''h'' (either gender): ''l''' (see ''Elision (French)''.)

★ plural (either gender): ''les''1
# The prepositions ''à'' (''to'', ''at'') and ''de'' (''of'', ''from'') contract with the articles ''le'' and ''les'' to form ''au'', ''du'', ''aux'', and ''des'', respectively.
The indefinite article

The French indefinite article is analogous to the English indefinite article ''a/an''. Like ''a/an'', the French indefinite article is used with a noun referring to a non-specific item, or to a specific item when the speaker and audience don't both know what the item is; so, « J'ai cassé 'une' chaise rouge » ("I broke 'a' red chair"). Unlike ''a/an'', the French indefinite article has a plural form, often translated as ''some'' but usually simply omitted in English; so, « Il y a 'des' livres là-bas » ("There are 'some ''or'' [no article]' books over there").
The indefinite article takes the following forms:

★ singular:


★ masculine: ''un''1


★ feminine: ''une''1

★ plural (either gender): ''des''1
# The indefinite article becomes ''de'' (or ''d''' if before a vowel) after a negative verb other than ''être'': « Je n'ai pas 'de' livre », "I don't have 'a ''or'' any' book." This use is related to expressions of quantity; see below.
The partitive article

There is no English partitive article; the French partitive article is often translated as ''some'', but often simply omitted in English. It is used to indicate an indefinite portion of something uncountable, or an indefinite number of something countable: « J'ai 'du' café » ("I have 'some ''or'' [no article]' coffee").
The partitive article takes the following forms:

★ singular:


★ before a consonant:



★ masculine: ''du''1



★ feminine: ''de la''1


★ before a vowel or a mute ''h'' (either gender): ''de l''' (see ''Elision (French)'')

★ plural (either gender): ''des''1
# Like the indefinite article, the partitive article becomes ''de'' (or ''d''' if before a vowel) after a negative verb other than ''être''.
Notice that except after a negative verb, the partitive article is formed by combining the preposition ''de'' (''of'', ''from'') with the definite article. Also note that in the plural, and after a negative verb, the indefinite and partitive articles take the same form; this makes sense, as there is no clear difference in meaning in these cases. (Some grammarians actually classify ''des'' as either exclusively indefinite or exclusively partitive, and say that the other article has no plural form. This does not affect the interpreted meaning of ''des''.)

Determiners


Determiners, like other adjectives, agree in gender and number with the noun they modify (or, in this case, determine).
Possessive determiners

The possessive determiners (also called ''possessive adjectives'' or ''possessive pronouns''; analogous to English ''my'', ''his'', etc.) are used to indicate the possessor of the noun they determine. They mark the person and number of the possessor, and are inflected to agree with their noun in gender and number. While English distinguishes between masculine and feminine singular possessors (''his'' vs. ''her''), French does not. As in English, possessive determiners do not necessarily express true ''possession''.
Their forms are as follows:
  possessed
singular plural
possessor first person singular ''mon'', ''ma''1 ''mes''
plural ''notre'' ''nos''
second person singular ''ton'', ''ta''1 ''tes''
plural ''votre'' ''vos''
third person singular ''son'', ''sa''1 ''ses''
plural ''leur'' ''leurs''

#The forms ''mon'', ''ton'', and ''son'' are used with masculine nouns, or before vowels or mute ''h'''s; the forms ''ma'', ''ta'', and ''sa'' are used before consonants with feminine nouns.
Demonstrative determiners

  singular plural
masculine ''ce''
''cet'' (before vowel and mute ''h'')
''ces''
feminine ''cette'' ''ces''

The demonstrative determiners (or ''demonstrative adjectives'') can mean either ''this'' or ''that'', ''these'' or ''those''. To be more precise or to avoid ambiguity, ''-ci'' or ''-là'' can be inserted after the noun:

★ cet homme-ci "this man"

★ cet homme-là "that man"
Interrogative determiners

The interrogative determiner ''quel'' means ''which'' or ''what''. It agrees in gender and number with the noun it modifies:
  singular plural
masculine ''quel'' ''quels''
feminine ''quelle'' ''quelles''

Examples: ''quel train'', ''quelle chaise'', ''quels hommes'', and ''quelles classes''.
''Quel'' can be used as an exclamation.

★ « Quel film ! » (what a movie!)

★ « Quelle gentillesse ! » (what kindness!)
Quantifiers

A ''quantifier'' is a determiner that quantifies its noun, like English "some" and "many." In French, as in English, quantifiers constitute an open word class, unlike most other kinds of determiners. In French, most quantifiers are formed using a noun or adverb of quantity and the preposition ''de'' (''d''' when before a vowel).
Quantifiers formed with a noun of quantity and the preposition ''de'' include the following:

★ ''des tas de'' ("lots of")

★ ''trois kilogrammes de'' ("three kilograms of")

★ ''une bouchée de'' ("a mouthful of")

★ ''une douzaine de'' ("a dozen (of)")
Quantifiers formed with an adverb of quantity and the preposition ''de'' include the following:

★ ''beaucoup de'' ("a lot of")

★ ''un peu de'' ("a little," "a few")

★ ''peu de'' ("little," "few")

★ ''assez de'', ''suffisamment de'' ("enough of")

★ ''pas de'' ("no," "not any")
Other quantifiers include:

★ ''bien'' + the partitive article ("much" or "many")

★ ''quelque(s)'' ("some")

★ the cardinal numbers (73, 4.2, and so on)

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