Articles

  • some

    Ways to translate “some” into French English uses “some” in many ways. French does not have one single match. The choice depends on whether you speak about a count noun or a mass noun, whether the amount is known, and whether you mean an unknown group or a rough number. Partitive articles: du, de la,…

  • français vs le français

    In French, the word français can appear either with or without the definite article le. The choice depends on how the word is used grammatically—whether you are talking about using the language or about the language itself. 1. Français without “le” You use français without the article when it functions as a complement, typically after…

  • de, du, de la, de l’, des

    The French words “de, du, de la, de l’, des” often confuse beginners because they can act as prepositions, indefinite articles, or partitive articles. Understanding how and when to use them will help you build clearer and more natural French sentences. De At its simplest, “de” means “of” or “from”. In this case, it acts…

  • Plural of “un” or “une” is “des”

    In French, the words “un” and “une” mean “a” or “an.” They are singular indefinite articles used before nouns. When making a noun plural, “un” and “une” change to “des.” This is the plural indefinite article, which means “some.” Examples: Understanding Articles An article is a small word that comes before a noun. In English,…