Articles – der, die, das, ein, eine

What is an Article?

An article is a small word placed before a noun. It tells us whether we are talking about a specific thing or any thing of that kind.

  • Definite article (bestimmter Artikel) — refers to a specific, known thing: the
  • Indefinite article (unbestimmter Artikel) — refers to a non-specific thing: a / an

Gender in German

Every German noun has a grammatical gender — masculine, feminine, or neuter. The article you use depends on the gender of the noun.

Unlike English, which uses only the and a/an, German has three forms of the definite article and two forms of the indefinite article:

  • der — masculine (maskulin)
  • die — feminine (feminin)
  • das — neuter (neutral)

You cannot always guess a noun's gender from its meaning — it must be learned together with the noun. Always memorise a new noun with its article.

Quick Overview
Gender Definite (The) Indefinite (a/an)
masculine der ein
feminine die eine
neuter das ein
plural (all genders) die

Note: indefinite articles have no plural form. Use the noun alone: Hunde (dogs), Bücher (books).

Definite Articles – der, die, das

Use the definite article when you are talking about something specific and known — both speaker and listener know which one is meant.


Masculine — der
  • Der Mann ist groß. (The man is tall.)
  • Der Hund schläft. (The dog is sleeping.)
  • Der Tisch ist braun. (The table is brown.)
Feminine — die
  • Die Frau ist klug. (The woman is smart.)
  • Die Katze ist weiß. (The cat is white.)
  • Die Schule ist groß. (The school is big.)
Neuter — das
  • Das Kind spielt. (The child plays.)
  • Das Buch ist neu. (The book is new.)
  • Das Auto ist rot. (The car is red.)
Indefinite Articles – ein, eine

Use the indefinite article when introducing something for the first time, or when talking about one of many.


Masculine — ein
  • Das ist ein Mann. (That is a man.)
  • Hier ist ein Stuhl. (Here is a chair.)
Feminine — eine
  • Das ist eine Frau. (That is a woman.)
  • Hier ist eine Tür. (Here is a door.)
Neuter — ein
  • Das ist ein Kind. (That is a child.)
  • Hier ist ein Fenster. (Here is a window.)

Masculine and neuter share the same indefinite article:

ein Mann  ·  ein Kind  ·  eine Frau

Common Noun Genders to Know

While gender must be learned with each noun, certain patterns can help:

Pattern Gender Examples
nouns ending in -er (people/jobs) der Lehrer, Vater, Bruder
nouns ending in -ung die Zeitung, Wohnung, Übung
nouns ending in -heit / -keit die Freiheit, Möglichkeit
nouns ending in -chen / -lein das Mädchen, Fräulein
most -e nouns die Katze, Schule, Straße
Definite vs. Indefinite — Side by Side

Here is how the two article types work in the same sentence:

Ein Mann steht an der Tür.

A man is standing at the door. (first mention — we don't know which man)

Der Mann ist main Vater.

The man is my father. (now we know exactly which man)

Das ist eine Katze. Die Katze heißt Mia.

That is a cat. The cat is called Mia.

Notice: first mention uses eine, the second reference uses die — the same pattern as English a / the.

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Title: <blue>der</blue>, die, <blue>das</blue> – <blue>Weather</blue> Words

Fill in the correct definite article (der, die, or das) for each weather-related noun.

Exercises


Regen ist nass.

The rain is wet.

Helper: Regen is masculine (male)

Sonne ist hell.

The sun is bright.

Helper: Sonne is feminine (female)

Gewitter ist laut.

The thunderstorm is loud.

Helper: Gewitter is neuter (neutral)

Wind ist stark.

The wind is strong.

Helper: Wind is masculine (male)

Wolke ist grau.

The cloud is gray.

Helper: Wolke is feminine (female)

Eis ist kalt.

The ice is cold.

Helper: Eis is neuter (neutral)