Understanding French articles: when to use the DEFINITE, INDEFINITE and PARTITIVE articles

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  • Опубліковано 15 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 181

  • @mainadonaldson
    @mainadonaldson Рік тому +138

    "You MUST have an article in front of a noun or the sentence will lose its meaning". For some reason this made a lightbulb go on for me, and it will make things like "J'apprend LE francais" easier to remember.

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому +13

      It is not true or not always true. For example, you can say either
      Je parle français
      or
      Je parle le français
      But you must say
      J'apprendS le français (do not forget the S)

    • @GorgieClarissa
      @GorgieClarissa Рік тому +3

      ​@Cyrus Chang so true. I can also said je suis professeure, je suis vegetarianne, je suis étudient. French is fun! Every rule has exceptions! No meaning loss!

    • @Gary-pe4ce
      @Gary-pe4ce Рік тому +1

      ​@@GorgieClarissa professions are an interesting one.
      Je suis étudiant.
      But add an adjective and it becomes
      Je suis un étudiant paresseux.

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому

      @@Gary-pe4ce No no, français can be either a noun (= la langue française or a French national if written with a capital F) or an adjective, but never an adverb (look up the word français in a French dictionary if you need verification). The French people often say "il parle un bon français" (he speaks very good French) as a compliment to someone.

    • @dennisleas8996
      @dennisleas8996 Рік тому +2

      "You MUST have an article in front of a noun..." while helpful, is a simplification. Nice, but too simple and I wish instructors (and books) would stop saying this.
      Based on this rule, I started writing, "Je vois deux les garçons." After all, you MUST have an article in front of a noun. Then I learned about determiners and my life improved. But I had to unlearn this rule.

  • @grllsgris
    @grllsgris 11 місяців тому +25

    Thank you! This explained articles 100x better than my teacher could

  • @kf4670
    @kf4670 Рік тому +11

    I love the way you explain everything! I went to you over my college professor because he couldn’t explain the difference between “qui” and “que” so that I could understand. Love you!❤

    • @rasikaaaa1066
      @rasikaaaa1066 Рік тому +3

      Hey there! Here i have something for you
      "Qui" and "que" are both pronouns in French, but they are used in different ways:
      - "Qui" is used to refer to people and, less commonly, to animals or things when they are personified. It is used as the subject of a verb or as the object of a preposition. For example: "Qui est-ce qui parle ?" (Who is speaking?) or "La fille qui habite ici" (The girl who lives here).
      - "Que" is used to refer to people, animals, things, or ideas as the direct object of a verb. It can also be used as the object of a preposition. For example: "J'ai vu la voiture que tu as achetée" (I saw the car that you bought) or "Il parle de ce dont il rêve" (He talks about what he dreams of).
      In summary, "qui" refers to the subject of a verb or the object of a preposition, while "que" refers to the direct object of a verb or the object of a preposition.

    • @hearts_from_umama
      @hearts_from_umama Рік тому +1

      S

    • @mkgmanu
      @mkgmanu Рік тому

      ​@@rasikaaaa1066hi Rasika I am impressed by your french knowledge 😍 Have you done DELF/DALF higher level? Will you be my friend 😊

    • @rasikaaaa1066
      @rasikaaaa1066 Рік тому

      @@mkgmanu thanks😁
      I'm on A1 level,i had the same question,i searched on google...and found so
      sure

  • @stupidstone9323
    @stupidstone9323 Місяць тому +2

    Tomorrow is my 7th grade half yearly french exam. This helped me a lot

  • @MrYoav5
    @MrYoav5 Рік тому +12

    Can't believe how much I needed this lesson, thank you 🙏

  • @sa21g22g23
    @sa21g22g23 Рік тому +4

    Merci beaucoup pour cette important et grand leçon du debut et matin de jeudi pour pouvoir comprendre mieux la belle grammaire française

    • @sa21g22g23
      @sa21g22g23 Рік тому

      Muchas y mil disculpas sise me repitió 2 veces la información ya que se roban mi wifi

  • @connoisseurification
    @connoisseurification Рік тому +13

    Awesome teacher to clarify things for English speakers. Now i know those funny two or three letter words when i come across them in my French lessons.

  • @pepchallanga3626
    @pepchallanga3626 Рік тому

    last night I dreamt of you Alexa and I was calling my friend, come and meet my professor...hoping one day will meet you my professor..may God keep u

  • @belleofnewyork9554
    @belleofnewyork9554 Рік тому +3

    Great lesson thk you madame. I was always tripping up on these, brings me much clarity.

  • @lynndaniel5881
    @lynndaniel5881 Рік тому +13

    I looove this lesson. Thanks for making it clear.

  • @soyebrahman9500
    @soyebrahman9500 Рік тому

    One of the best teacher ever

  • @THatGuy-b9x
    @THatGuy-b9x 10 місяців тому +1

    Thanks. I was having trouble with this since a 2 weeks. Really helped me out

  • @andrewsalmon100
    @andrewsalmon100 Рік тому +8

    Encore une fois, une autre excellente leçon concise qui s'ajoute à mon français. Merci. Au café, je déguste un café avec du gâteau !

    • @RobloxNPCsad
      @RobloxNPCsad 9 місяців тому

      Merci Madame tomorrow is my French exam😅

  • @TanyaLanguageCoaching
    @TanyaLanguageCoaching Рік тому +13

    Very useful! Very well explained. And fun to watch.

  • @faizalhossen2289
    @faizalhossen2289 Рік тому +2

    Melbourne, Australie. Merci pour cette leçon. Tres utile.

  • @shaoqinglihu696
    @shaoqinglihu696 Рік тому

    Now I understand where the “du pain” or “du beurre” comes from. Merci beaucoup ❤

  • @tanwir1733
    @tanwir1733 2 місяці тому +1

    thankyou so much because i couden't even understand any thing from my teacher , thanku so much to clear my doudt

  • @DingleDingleCasil196
    @DingleDingleCasil196 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for your teachings.
    You explains the words so clearly. Learned a lot. Stay always safe. Peace on EARTH. Merci.

  • @everydayopera9137
    @everydayopera9137 Рік тому +1

    Merci beaucoup! Votre chaîne est vraiment fantastique!

  • @malcolmjamesturner
    @malcolmjamesturner Рік тому +1

    Great lessons. Beautiful teacher ❤

  • @maxwellmhaka329
    @maxwellmhaka329 Рік тому

    Merci beaucoup Alexa, vous êtes le meilleur.

  • @russellperry9902
    @russellperry9902 Рік тому +3

    Merci por la commitment.
    Thank you for your commitment.

  • @jakeplay1107
    @jakeplay1107 9 місяців тому

    Thank you it was so help full .when my teacher explained the same i didn't understand anything.merci

  • @rajinarajeevmv4363
    @rajinarajeevmv4363 Рік тому +2

    Merci beaucoup madame ..... ❤❤
    ❤❤

  • @mithilapraharshanimayadunn5301

    You made my day !!!! Thanks Alexa !!!!!

  • @noufhalmaeily7981
    @noufhalmaeily7981 Рік тому +1

    I really needed this lesson

  • @onwumerebenjamin2005
    @onwumerebenjamin2005 Рік тому

    You are really a good teacher and explain thanks alot

  • @spring6860
    @spring6860 10 місяців тому

    Thanks a ton! You have no idea how much of a big help this is to me!

  • @randileebabcock4u
    @randileebabcock4u Рік тому

    Merci Madame! I passed the test!

  • @rafadydkiemmacha7543
    @rafadydkiemmacha7543 Рік тому +8

    In Polish we use cases for this difference. If you want a cake, you'd use an accusative case: "Chcę ciasto". But if you want some cake, you'd use genitive case and say "Chcę ciasta". This can be confusing for foreigners, as "ciasta" is also just plural for cake in Polish, but in this case (pun!) it's singular in a genitive case.

  • @ReddShinii_71
    @ReddShinii_71 Рік тому +1

    Merci beaucoup madam Alexa 🥰♥️!

  • @PaulRamone356
    @PaulRamone356 Рік тому +1

    Merci Beaucoup Madam Alexa!

  • @itsmejanny
    @itsmejanny Рік тому +1

    Thank you - I needed it explained this way to really get it.

  • @mernaabdo6124
    @mernaabdo6124 Рік тому +4

    Merci beaucoup ❤

  • @zuzanapitrunova2107
    @zuzanapitrunova2107 Рік тому +2

    Thank you very much for the video! It was very helpful.

  • @erikamanik148
    @erikamanik148 Рік тому +1

    Merci beaucoup Alexa ❤

  • @sunandawadyalkar6808
    @sunandawadyalkar6808 Рік тому +2

    Super explanation...merci beaucoup

  • @BorselinoThadchack
    @BorselinoThadchack Рік тому

    My God, I looked at your very first youtube lesson waaay way back. So changed! Ah...life

  • @zehaohe7579
    @zehaohe7579 11 місяців тому +1

    Great explanation, thank you! But I do have a question: if the indefinite plural is des and also the partitive plural is des, are there any differences in meaning or usage between the two?

    • @shrriyakallingal9487
      @shrriyakallingal9487 11 місяців тому +1

      well, im no expert in french, but i think it depends upon the context
      j'ai des crayons (i have some crayons)
      des in this context is used for saying `some`
      but, des is also used for saying some in context of indefinite article...their difference would be , des in partitive is used for expressing unknown quantity., and moreover, its used mostly in food items (not always.)

  • @bbpete8349
    @bbpete8349 Рік тому +2

    merci pour les instructions!

  • @hiongun
    @hiongun Рік тому +2

    another french mystery solved. merci.

  • @violetoyugi7250
    @violetoyugi7250 Рік тому +1

    Thank you Alexa

  • @RobloxNPCsad
    @RobloxNPCsad 9 місяців тому +7

    Merci madam tomorrow is my French exam😅

  • @valeriemac679
    @valeriemac679 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for cool lesson❤

  • @bytheway1031
    @bytheway1031 Рік тому +1

    Thanks Alexa👍

  • @stephanrichardson98
    @stephanrichardson98 Рік тому +2

    Merci pour le lesson. Vous êtes un bon professeur

  • @GaureshUgandran
    @GaureshUgandran 2 місяці тому

    my official French teacher

  • @MxMSuff
    @MxMSuff Рік тому +1

    Merci, Alexa

  • @okwuakpunonu
    @okwuakpunonu Рік тому +2

    Merci pour le vidéo. Bon boulot

  • @iloveunicorns123
    @iloveunicorns123 23 дні тому

    Thank you so much for this!!

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. Рік тому +2

    Merci pour le leçon.

    • @faizalhossen2289
      @faizalhossen2289 Рік тому

      Melbourne, Australie. Salut, Pokhraj. On dit: "la leçon".

  • @the_activefoodie
    @the_activefoodie Рік тому +7

    Awesome! Thank you so much for clearing this up!

  • @mind_games75284
    @mind_games75284 2 місяці тому +1

    thankyou so much

  • @air-wizard
    @air-wizard 11 місяців тому

    Oi, bravo, I'm satisfied , you explain very well

  • @user-c7y7u
    @user-c7y7u Рік тому

    Merci Madame ❤

  • @karensullivan3
    @karensullivan3 Рік тому

    Oh wow I finally get it! Thank you

  • @songsnitin
    @songsnitin 3 місяці тому

    Merci beaucoup alexa

  • @RANVEER.4321
    @RANVEER.4321 6 місяців тому

    Great. Bon travai. Simple and effective

  • @skhalanekar
    @skhalanekar Рік тому

    Thank you Ma'am.

  • @ahmedzaki2651
    @ahmedzaki2651 Рік тому +2

    Thank u alexa

  • @saramohee8341
    @saramohee8341 6 місяців тому

    Thanks i have french final exam tomorrow 😅

  • @maydaymaria470
    @maydaymaria470 Рік тому +5

    Is the plural form of indefinitive articles the same as the plural form of partitives? Does it have the same meaning?

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому

      > => des is always an indefinite article EXCEPT when the noun is always in plural (never in singular).
      For example:
      des vacances (vacance does not exist) => here des is a partitive article because you can substitute des by un peu de, it is still correct : un peu de vacances
      des élèves => here des is an indefinite article because you cannot replace des by un peu de, neither un peu d'élèves or un peu d'élève makes any sense.

    • @assiassi9115
      @assiassi9115 Рік тому +1

      ​@Cyrus Chang Just to add a precision regarding the word "vacance": it does exist, its use is limited to a position or role that wouldn't be occupied or provided. For example: "la vacance du pouvoir" the state of lacking someone who rules or occupies a leadership position. I hope this helped. 😊

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому

      @@assiassi9115 YES 👍. It means vacancy, not vacation in English.

    • @assiassi9115
      @assiassi9115 Рік тому

      @@cyruschang1904 Right! Same sounding in French but different meaning in English, as in french the meaning of both words refers to the idea of something or someone absent. Cheers!

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому

      @@assiassi9115 On dirait plutôt que c'est le même mot avec deux significations différentes 😀

  • @bisou1018
    @bisou1018 Рік тому

    Merci pour le vidéo
    C'est m'aide beaucoup 😅

  • @DhhSgj-ut1zg
    @DhhSgj-ut1zg 5 місяців тому

    J'ai adoré t'apprendre ❤

  • @ahmedzaki2651
    @ahmedzaki2651 Рік тому +1

    How much I struggled with verb+de...

  • @UNEWS_ANIMATIONS
    @UNEWS_ANIMATIONS Рік тому +1

    great lesson.Thanks!!!

  • @sarahgarcia2850
    @sarahgarcia2850 11 місяців тому

    my son and I are doing a curriculum called The Easy French and he is writing his vocabulary words in French as lists. He wants to know if the article in front of the noun such as, L’animal and L’orange dictate the word's grouping of the word, being a L' word? Or the letter that follows the L' dictate its group, in this case A and O? I hope my question makes sense.

  • @nasheemashahbazi6055
    @nasheemashahbazi6055 Рік тому

    🎉Thank you Alexa

  • @yawenj3185
    @yawenj3185 Рік тому

    Merci beaucoup! ❤❤

  • @ErinMonaghan-x3y
    @ErinMonaghan-x3y Рік тому

    this helped so much thank you sm!

  • @_1m-fOiV3_h3h3
    @_1m-fOiV3_h3h3 Рік тому

    thanks you for this lesson its so easy to understanddd:)

  • @nemiaochagabia2898
    @nemiaochagabia2898 Рік тому

    Wow salute the way you explain:)

  • @argonwheatbelly637
    @argonwheatbelly637 Рік тому

    Même si ça fait des années, je m'en souviens encore.

  • @fedelicskaaria7289
    @fedelicskaaria7289 Рік тому

    Super Leçon Alexa A bientot

  • @vidyavijaykumar7629
    @vidyavijaykumar7629 Рік тому

    Very well explained mam mercy beaucoup ❤

  • @darkside0094
    @darkside0094 5 місяців тому

    I live in France and I once said "Je veux du café" but the waitress understood "Je veux deux café" and so they gave me 2 cups of coffee

  • @ishanbhattacharya8106
    @ishanbhattacharya8106 Рік тому +7

    But "du" and "de la" also refers to "of"

    • @rafadydkiemmacha7543
      @rafadydkiemmacha7543 Рік тому +5

      Yes, they do, but not in the context of "I want".

    • @dishansachintha536
      @dishansachintha536 Рік тому

      They do also refer to "some,about, from, of, by", but context matters

    • @abhaypratap802
      @abhaypratap802 Рік тому

      Yes but they aren’t partitive articles in those cases. Just like le, la and les can either be articles or COD depending on the context

    • @faizalhossen2289
      @faizalhossen2289 Рік тому

      Melbourne, Australia. You are right. It will depend on the sentence/context.

  • @IdolNova
    @IdolNova 2 місяці тому

    Thankkkk youu soo muchhh

  • @JuiceDrumandBass
    @JuiceDrumandBass Рік тому

    Very helpful!

  • @kenw5437
    @kenw5437 2 місяці тому

    What is the correct article for the sentence, "Est ce que tu as ____ cours tous les jours?" Does it work without an article?

  • @bryanrajakumar3669
    @bryanrajakumar3669 Рік тому

    what about de l' used for vowel or silent h noun like
    de l'eau

  • @vivekjoshi8743
    @vivekjoshi8743 2 дні тому

    Thanks ❤😅

  • @emmanuellaabang8436
    @emmanuellaabang8436 Рік тому +1

    So we can use de la when the noun that comes after it is a feminine word, but u can't use de le when the noun is a masculine word....waawuu...tk u ma for this.

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому +1

      When le is the definite article => du
      When le is a pronoun => de le

    • @emmanuellaabang8436
      @emmanuellaabang8436 Рік тому

      @@cyruschang1904 Can you please give an example....I don't quite get what u mean

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому

      @@emmanuellaabang8436 In French, le can mean either the masculin definite article "the" or the masculin direct object pronoun (it, him)
      J'ai du vin => du vin = de + le vin, le = the
      Il m'a dit de voir ce film (he told me to see this movie)
      If we replace ce film by a pronoun, we will say
      Il m'a dit de le voir = he told me to see it
      Ma mère m'a dit de voir mon père (my mom told me to see my father)
      Elle m'a dit de le voir = she told me to see him

  • @rupalichadda4504
    @rupalichadda4504 Рік тому +1

    I have confusion regarding articles...like de bonnes notes....or des bonnes notes/de nouvelles choses/des nouvelles choses...how to differentiate them...please make a video regarding it

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому +1

      If the adjective is between des and the plural noun, des becomes de:
      des nouvelles
      de bonnes nouvelles
      des balades magnifiques
      de magnifiques balades
      (magnifique is one of those few adjectives that can go before or after the noun without any change of meaning)
      EXCEPT
      when the "adjective + noun" is a fixed term
      des
      des

    • @rupalichadda4504
      @rupalichadda4504 Рік тому

      @@cyruschang1904 but we also use des petites choses ...my doubt is why not de petites choses ?

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому

      @@rupalichadda4504 It should be " de petites choses". This is a grammar rule that more and more people are ignoring.

    • @rupalichadda4504
      @rupalichadda4504 Рік тому

      @@cyruschang1904 I too agree that it should be ' de petites choses,de nouvelles choses' except that when there is conjugation of ' de + les '= des

  • @mrocksgamer3162
    @mrocksgamer3162 Рік тому +1

    Ma'am you taught 'des' in this video, but 'des ' is present in both partitive and indefinite article.. so how will we know which is being used?

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому +2

      > => des is always an indefinite article EXCEPT when the noun is always in plural (never in singular).
      For example:
      des vacances (vacance does not exist) => here des is a partitive article because you can substitute des by un peu de, it is still correct : un peu de vacances
      des élèves => here des is an indefinite article because you cannot replace des by un peu de, neither un peu d'élèves or un peu d'élève makes any sense.

    • @mrocksgamer3162
      @mrocksgamer3162 Рік тому

      @@cyruschang1904 okay.. thank you 👍

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому +1

      @@mrocksgamer3162 I just thought of two instances where des = de les
      1) verbal expressions (les locutions verbales) that require DE, such as avoir besoin de, avoir envie de, etc. if you see a sentence with such verbal expression, for example, j'ai besoin des outils qu'il m'a donnés, you know des is "de les" (I need the tools that he gave me)
      2) when des means "of the"
      L'État de New York est un État des États-Unis (de + les États-Unis). The state of New York is a state of the (des) United States of America.

    • @mrocksgamer3162
      @mrocksgamer3162 Рік тому

      @@cyruschang1904 okay sir! Thanks for the information... 🙏 Need to learn it by heart so that I can remember.. 😁

  • @shahroozeden8431
    @shahroozeden8431 5 місяців тому +1

    Merci Mama
    bisous bisous

  • @midoriiiii34
    @midoriiiii34 Рік тому +1

    What about the article “ce”?

    • @cyruschang1904
      @cyruschang1904 Рік тому +3

      Ce is not an article.
      Ce can be a demonstrative pronoun (it):
      C'est un livre = it is a book
      C'est une pomme = it is an apple
      or a demonstrative adjective (this):
      J'aime ce (♂️) livre : I like this book
      J'aime cette (♀️) pomme : I like this apple
      J'aime ces (♂️♀️) livres/pommes : I like these books/apples

  • @kguy2know
    @kguy2know Рік тому

    your wonderful!!!

  • @Karmenasmr
    @Karmenasmr Рік тому

    So, "Des" can be either indefinite or partitive?

  • @laylaalquadi3492
    @laylaalquadi3492 Рік тому +1

    You are super, ❤ vous avez magnifique❤

  • @eliashansan9809
    @eliashansan9809 Рік тому +1

    Takk!

  • @SamsuperFc
    @SamsuperFc Рік тому +8

    I want the cake of my sister💀

  • @michaelfisher9267
    @michaelfisher9267 Рік тому

    I am wondering about the following:
    Du jus orange.
    Du jus d'orange.
    Du jus de l'orange.

    • @grouloulle
      @grouloulle Рік тому

      Du jus de l'or, Ange.

    • @Gary-pe4ce
      @Gary-pe4ce Рік тому

      Du jus d'orange = some orange juice
      When it comes to food items you only use the preposition de if it is the main ingredient, you don't use du or de la between the dish and main ingredient only de or d'.

  • @SimoSimo-wt9he
    @SimoSimo-wt9he Рік тому

    ممكن الطرجمة باللغة العربية

  • @mael4824
    @mael4824 Рік тому +1

    Merci meuf, tu es le sang de la veine sa mère

  • @rajeshkumarsanghai
    @rajeshkumarsanghai Рік тому +1

    I want a cake .
    I want the cake .
    I want some cake .

  • @millzimatt
    @millzimatt 9 місяців тому +1

    I really dont want my sister's cake... great lesson tho

  • @davmarsh
    @davmarsh 8 місяців тому

    you amazing

  • @Devatrish42069
    @Devatrish42069 Місяць тому +1

    2:44 look man, i uhh- 💀

  • @krishnapillaijanardanannai9897
    @krishnapillaijanardanannai9897 4 місяці тому +2

    2:37 oh hell naw 💀