I do. The is “el/la” and a is “un/una”.
In my dad’s language and my second language, it’s “the” and “a”
Yes. In danish either “en” or “et” goes in front of nouns like this: “en kat” and “et hus”. This is equal to “a cat” and “a house”.
If it’s in specific, it goes at the end of the word instead like this: “katten” and “huset”. This is equal to “the cat” and “the house”.
We don’t have either an ‘a’ or a ‘the’, but we have a ‘that’ and it’s ‘o’.
A bird = Kuş => Bir Kuş
If we need to specify that it is singular (like you often do with ‘a’ we say ‘one’ aka ‘bir’ instead)
This language is Turkish, by the way.
Mandarin:
No “the,” you just say the noun and that’s it.
“A” or any other quantity of a noun is generalized as a number, followed by a character indicating quantity, followed by the noun. “An apple” is 一个苹果 (yi ge ping guo), 一 literally means one, 个 is the character that denotes quantity (it’s the most common one but some nouns have different quantity adjectives), 苹果 is apple. Two is an exception because there’s a special character for it that’s different from the number two (两个苹果 as opposed to 二个苹果), but every other number quantity is the same as the number itself.
I like Chinese as a language
Yes.
English.
I’ve heard of that one. I think the is “the” and a is “a”.
Also sometimes “an”.
Truly a terrible language.
I believe that “a” is either “a” or “an”; it depends.
russian, nope!
No (Korean), and it is what Korean people including myself often have trouble with.
Portuguese, we do and we use it in everything. Even something simple like “for my Father” most of us say “for the my Father”.
“Sou filho do meu pai”
Translating literally becomes:
“am son of the my Father”
That’s not true for all Portuguese speakers. Most brazilian northeasterners don’t use it as you described, as it’s unnecessary.
Edit: The way I would say the sentences above:
“Pra meu pai”
“Sou filho de meu pai”I was gonna edit the comment to add a similar note right after posting but I was already half asleep and apparently I didn’t do it.
Estou a aprender o português!!
Icelandic has no word for “a.” A noun without a definite article suffix can be either “noun” or “a noun.” Then there is a suffix for definite article (epli “apple” -> eplið “the apple”). There is also a slightly more obscure hinn/hin/hið which can mean “the” as a separate word, but that’s not really used in most situations.
No. (Finnish). I remember watching english speaking social media influencers Dave Cad (UK) and Chachi Gonzales (USA) who both moved to Finland saying that their english have gone worse through the years because they have begun to drop ”the” and ”a/an” in conversations just like many Finns do when they speak english.
No we don’t (Slovak)
In german we have der/die/das for the and ein/eine for a.
And also completely unhinged declensions for them… Really, WTF Germany? 😭
Don’t tell them about the noun cases though
Funny story. I know an old Chinese man who has a stutter. When he starts a sentence he often repeats the the the the the before he gets going. It sounds like removed removed removed. So far no one has confronted him but I always worry it will happen some day.
A very bad word that we’re not even supposed to say on the internet, believe it or not.
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Oh nooo 😭
o, a, os, as for “the”
um, uma, uns, umas for “a”
both lists mean: singular masculine, singular feminine, plural masculine, plural feminine.
and if the gender is unknown or mixed you use the masculine