PrepMyFrench
PrepMyFrench
Ang mga articles ay ang mahalagang pundasyon ng mga pangungusap sa French, na tumutukoy sa kasarian (gender) at bilang (number) ng mga pangngalan. Dalubhasain ang mga ito upang maging natural at tumpak ang iyong pananalita.
Ginagamit upang tumukoy sa isang partikular na pangngalan o isang pangkalahatang konsepto. Sanayin ang mga pattern na ito gamit ang PrepMyFrench interactive exercises upang mahasa ang iyong memorya.
Hindi tulad sa English, ang mga pangngalan sa French ay laging nangangailangan ng article. Nagpapahayag ka man ng isang partikular na bagay o ng konsepto ng pag-ibig, ang article ay mandatory. Tingnan ang PrepMyFrench verb conjugator upang makita kung paano nakikipag-ugnayan ang mga articles sa iba't ibang istruktura ng pangungusap.
Ginagamit ang mga ito para sa mga hindi partikular na bagay o isa sa marami. Kung nahihirapan ka sa kasarian (gender), suriin ang aming Noun Gender Guide para sa karagdagang mga tip.
Ginagamit para sa mga daming hindi mabibilang (uncountable quantities) o 'kaunti' ng isang bagay. Dito madalas nahihirapan ang maraming mag-aaral—perpektuhin ang iyong paggamit nito sa pamamagitan ng PrepMyFrench's advanced grammar modules.
J'ai acheté une baguette et du fromage.
I bought a baguette and some cheese.
Le soleil se lève à l'est.
The sun rises in the east.
Je ne bois pas de café le soir.
I don't drink coffee in the evening.
Elle a des idées brillantes.
She has brilliant ideas.
Il y a de beaux jardins dans ce quartier.
There are beautiful gardens in this neighborhood.
Je voudrais de l'eau, s'il vous plaît.
I would like some water, please.
J'aime le chocolat. → J'aime chocolat.
J'aime le chocolat.
French ALWAYS uses an article before nouns when expressing general likes/dislikes. English drops it ('I like chocolate'), but French keeps it. Omitting the article is one of the most common anglicisms.
Je ne veux pas du café.
Je ne veux pas de café.
After negation, du/de la/des all become de (or d' before vowels). The partitive article disappears: Je veux du café → Je ne veux pas de café. This rule also applies after expressions of quantity: beaucoup de, peu de, assez de.
Je cherche un homme avec les cheveux blonds.
Je cherche un homme aux cheveux blonds.
Use à + les → aux for descriptive characteristics (l'homme aux cheveux blonds = the blond-haired man). Using avec + article is an English calque. French prefers à for inherent physical traits.
🍽️ The Menu Rule
Think of French articles like a restaurant menu: LE/LA/LES is the 'definite dish' — the specific item you know. UN/UNE/DES is 'a dish from the menu' — one of many. DU/DE LA is 'some of the dish' — an unspecified portion. After negation, the portion disappears: no dish → no article, just DE!
Article choice is tested from A1 through B2 in both TEF and TCF. At A2, examiners check definite/indefinite distinction. At B1, partitive articles (du, de la) and their behavior after negation (→ de) are tested. At B2, the subtle cases appear: de before plural adjectives (de beaux jardins), and article choice with abstract nouns. The 'de after negation' rule is the single most-tested article concept.
At a French bakery:
Je voudrais une baguette et du pain de campagne, s'il vous plaît.
Voilà ! Vous voulez des croissants aussi ?
Non merci, je ne prends pas de croissants aujourd'hui.
Practice definite, indefinite, and partitive articles with 25 interactive questions on PrepMyFrench. Master le, la, les, un, une, des, du, de la with instant scoring.
Take PrepMyFrench's free CEFR placement test (A1-C1) to find your exact French level. Personalized grammar recommendations included.