The Spanish definite articles are "el" (masculine singular), "la" (feminine singular), "los" (masculine plural), and "las" (feminine plural). They are used before nouns to indicate a specific or particular item.
The correct pair of definite and indefinite articles for the word "disquette" is "la" for the definite article and "une" for the indefinite article in French.
"Plateau" and "table" are English equivalents of the Spanish word mesa. The pronunciation of the feminine singular noun - which may be preceded by the feminine singular definite (la, "the") or indefinite (una, "a, an") articles - will be "MEY-sa" in Spanish.
In Spanish, "el" is the masculine definite article used before masculine singular nouns, while "la" is the feminine definite article used before feminine singular nouns. These articles are used to indicate the gender of the noun.
Indefinite articles in Spanish are "un" (masculine singular), "una" (feminine singular), "unos" (masculine plural), and "unas" (feminine plural). They are used to refer to non-specific nouns or to introduce new, unspecified items in a sentence.
In Spanish class, indefinite articles were a lot easier to learn than definite articles.
La - The El - the/this
The Spanish definite articles are "el" (masculine singular), "la" (feminine singular), "los" (masculine plural), and "las" (feminine plural). They are used before nouns to indicate a specific or particular item.
It is the plural form of the definite articles (le, la, English "the"). There is only one form, no gender agreement for plural definite articles (unlike Spanish).
"Mapa" is a masculine noun, even though it ends in "a". So the singular is "el mapa", the plural is "los mapas".
Definite Articles There are four definite articles and they all mean "the" Masculine/singular :El Masculine/plural : Los Feminine/singular Feminine/plural :Las Indefinite articles There are four indefinite articles. The singular ones mean "a" and the plural ones mean "some" Masculine/ singular :Un Masculine/plural :Unos Feminine/ singular :Una Feminine/plural :Unas
No, "cuadernos" is a plural noun meaning notebooks in Spanish. It is not a definite article. Definite articles in Spanish are "el" (masculine singular), "la" (feminine singular), "los" (masculine plural), and "las" (feminine plural).
definite articles and indefinite articles
Definite articles MUST agree with number and gender of the noun.If the noun is:Singular and masculine, use el.Singular and feminine, use la.Plural and masculine, use los.Plural and feminine, use las.
definite articles and indefinite articles
indefinite articles - a, an, one definite articles - the this that those these interrogative articles - which what who
los artículos definite articles (the)= el, la, los, las indefinite (a, an, some)= un, una, unos, unas