An
Every German noun has a
Unlike English, which uses only
You
| Gender | Definite ( |
Indefinite |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| masculine | |||
| feminine | |||
| neuter | |||
| plural (all genders) | — |
Note: indefinite articles have no plural form. Use the noun alone: Hunde (dogs), Bücher (books).
Use the definite article when you are talking about something
Use the indefinite article when introducing something for the
While gender must be learned with each noun, certain patterns can help:
| Pattern | Gender | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| nouns ending in |
Lehrer, Vater, Bruder | |
| nouns ending in |
Zeitung, Wohnung, Übung | |
| nouns ending in |
Freiheit, Möglichkeit | |
| nouns ending in |
Mädchen, Fräulein | |
| most |
Katze, Schule, Straße |
Here is how the two article types work in the same sentence:
Notice: first mention uses
Fill in the correct definite article (
The rain is wet.
The sun is bright.
The thunderstorm is loud.
The wind is strong.
The cloud is gray.
The ice is cold.