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determiners and articles 101

Nouns in German are often preceded by determiners. These are small words which give extra information about the noun.

One important type of determiner are articles. There is the definite article der/die/das, which is equivalent to the in English, and the indefinite article ein/eine, which is equivalent to a/an.

Just like in English, der/die/das refers to a specific thing which is already known, while ein/eine refers to a thing generically or introduces a new thing into the conversation.

Alongside the definite and indefinite articles, there are many other determiners which we will look at later on.

no article

Nouns can also exist without an article, especially in the plural, for example:

Unlike English, German sometimes omits articles before predicate nouns. A noun is a predicate noun when it is connected to the subject with a linking verb. This construction is used to show equivalence – that something is something. The examples will make this easier to understand:

Note that in the last example, Deutsche is a noun whereas German is used as an adjective in the English example.

determiners and gender

Determiners in German match the gender of the noun they precede. Look at these examples using the definite and indefinite articles.

You may have noticed that both masculine and neuter (der/das) use the article ein. This means that when using an indefinite article you only need to pay attention to whether the noun is feminine or not, as feminine nouns use eine.

countries

Some countries in German are preceded by a definite article. This is a bit like how we say the Netherlands or the Phillippines, and how some people (incorrectly) refer to Ukraine as the Ukraine:

universal statements

German often uses the definite article when making universal statements where we would omit it in English. This is especially the case with abstract nouns. Take a look at these examples:

stressing the definite article in speech