Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Chapter 3 - El básico. le, la y les son los equivalentes en frances de el, la y los/las, respectivamente. La palabra les es usado para cualquier objeto con cualquier tipo de genero que sea. Cuando el sustantivo despues de la o le empieza con una vocal, le o la se convierte en l' .

    • History

      New chapter: le passé composé (perfect) New layout and a new...

    • Hacer Una Donación

      The French Tutorial is a charityware. The French Tutorial is...

    • Privacy

      The French Tutorial desde el año 1999. Twitter; Facebook;...

  2. Here are the rules for using definite articles in French: For singular masculine nouns, the definite article is “le” (e.g. “le livre” = the book ). For singular feminine nouns, the definite article is “la” (e.g. “la voiture” = the car ). For plural nouns, the definite article is “les” (e.g. “les livres” = the books ).

  3. le, la and les are the french equivalents for the . As French makes a distinction between "masculine and feminine objects", people use le for masculine things/persons and la for feminine things/persons. However, in the plural, only les is used whatever the gender is. Le téléphone > les téléphone s. La télévision > les télévision s.

  4. Femenino. plural. + Hay tres artículos definidos singulares: Masculino: le. Femenino: la. Contraído (masc o fem delante de vocal o h muda): l’. + Sólo hay un artículo definido plural: les. Cuando van precedidos de las preposiciones à y de, los artículos definidos le y les deben contraerse con ellas: . Utilización de los artículos definidos.

    • French Articles: The Basics
    • Definite Articles: “The” in French
    • Indefinite Articles: “A,” “An,” and “Some” in French
    • Partitive Articles: “Some” Or “Any” in French
    • Conclusion: Articles in French

    There are three types of French articles: definite articles, indefinite articles, and partitive articles. Each type has a different meaning, but they all follow a set of standard rules: 1. An article comes before a noun. A noun is a person, place, thing, or idea. 2. As nouns have gender in French, the article must match the gender of the noun (masc...

    Definite articles refer to known or specific nouns. All of the French definite articles translate to English as the. They must match the gender and number of the noun they precede. The definite articles in Frenchare: Both le and la will form contractions with nouns that begin with a vowel or vowel sound (like a silent “h”) in French. To make these ...

    Indefinite articles refer to unknown or general nouns. The French indefinite articles un and une are for singular nouns, which in English can be either a or an, while the indefinite article des for plural nouns generally translates as some. The indefinite articles in French must match the gender and number of the nouns they precede. The indefinite ...

    Partitive articles in French refer to “part of” or “some of” a whole object, or to several objects among many. The partitive articles du, de la, de l’, and des generally translate as some in French, while they can also take other translations depending on the context, namely any. When the noun is singular, the partitive article indicates “part of” ...

    We’ve written a lot here to give a full explanation on all the ways to say the and a in French. Known respectively as the definite articles and indefinite articles, the main difference with their English counterparts is that French has different forms of each one to match the gender and number of the nouns they precede. In plural, the indefinite ar...

  5. plural. les. les. + There are three singular definite articles: Masculine: le. Feminine: la. Contracted (masc or fem in front of vowel or mute h ): l’. + There is only one plural definite article: les. When preceded by the prepositions à and de, the definite articles le and les must contract with them:

  6. Los artículos (les articles, en frances) preceden a los sustantivos manifestando su género (masculino o femenino) y número (singular o plural). Los artículos pueden ser determinados (le, la, les) o indeterminados (un, une, des). Aprende a identificar y emplear correctamente los artículos en francés y mejorar así tu expresión escrita y oral.