Indefinite Articles Saint Louis MO

Use different indefinite articles based on whether the noun that follows is masculine, feminine, singular, or plural.

Local Companies

KGHarris & Associates, LLC
314-854-9124
231 South Bemiston
Clayton, MO
Eldertech Solutions
314.546.4232
520 Kingsland
St. Louis, MO
Trainiac
(314) 266-7704
Suite 202 The Desoto
Saint Louis, MO
Global Village Languge Center
314 989 9112
8428 Delmar Blvd.
St. Louis, MO
Business Industrial Network
573-547-5630
St. Louis, AK
Jenkin Family Tutoring Service
618-512-1022
14 Fairway Est
Granite City, IL
Carpenters Union Local 1596
(314) 647-2223
1401 Hampton Ave
Saint Louis, MO
Local Union No 4 Bctgm
(314) 664-0536
2615 Winnebago St
Saint Louis, MO
St Louis Typographical Union No 8-Cwa 14616
(314) 644-5351
6255 Knox Industrial Dr
Saint Louis, MO
Sprinkler Fitters Union Local 268 Training Center
(314) 621-7107
1544 S 3rd St
Saint Louis, MO

Indefinite articles, shown in Table 1 , refer to persons and objects not specifically identified: a girl, an apple, or some boys. Use different indefinate articles based on whether the noun that follows is masculine, feminine, singular, or plural.

TABLE 1 Indefinite Articles

Masculine

Feminine

Singular

un

une

un garçon (a boy)

une fille (a girl)

un ami (a friend)

une amie (a friend)

Plural

des

des

des garçons (boys or some boys)

des filles (girls or some girls)

des amis (friends or some friends)

des amies (friends or some friends)

The e from the indefinite article une is never dropped. This final e does, however, change the sound of the word un, which is nasalized, to une, which is not nasalized.

Omit the indefinite article in the following cases:

  • After the verb être (to be) and devenir (to become) that come before the names of professions, except after c'est or when the noun is modified by an adjective

    • Anne est docteur. (Anne is a doctor.)

    • Luc devient avocat. (Luc is becoming a lawyer.)

    But:

    • C'est une actrice. (She's an actress.)

    • C'est un dentiste. (He's a dentist.)

    • M. Leconte est un patron populaire. (Mr. Leconte is a popular boss.)

  • After the exclamatory adjective quel (quelle, quels, quelles)

    • Quel garçon curieux! (What a curious boy!)

    • Quelles maisons luxueuses! (What luxurious houses!)

  • Before the numbers cent (100) and mille (1,000)

    • cent enfants (one hundred children)

    • mille dollars (one thousand dollars)

Cliffs Notes Online

Featured Local Company

KGHarris & Associates, LLC

314-854-9124
231 South Bemiston
Clayton, MO
www.keysguidetojobs.net