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The document discusses the concept of articles in grammar, detailing their types including definite, indefinite, proper, partitive, negative, and zero articles. It highlights the variations in article usage across different languages, noting that some languages lack articles entirely while others have unique forms or rules for their use. Additionally, it touches on the historical development of articles in various language families and their grammatical implications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views

a

The document discusses the concept of articles in grammar, detailing their types including definite, indefinite, proper, partitive, negative, and zero articles. It highlights the variations in article usage across different languages, noting that some languages lack articles entirely while others have unique forms or rules for their use. Additionally, it touches on the historical development of articles in various language families and their grammatical implications.

Uploaded by

陳文迪
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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(incl. Swahili).

In some languages
that do have articles, such as
some North Caucasian languages,

de,
d', d
u, d
Fre le, la, un, une,
e
nch l', les des
la, d
es,
de l'
der,
ein, eine,
die, d
Ger einer, ei
as
ma — nes
des,
n einem, e
dem,
inen
den
m Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For grammatical articles in English, see English articles.

In grammar, an article is any member of a class of dedicated words that are


used with noun phrases to mark the identifiability of the referents of the noun
phrases. The category of articles constitutes a part of speech.

In English, b

s show that definite articles are morphological elements linked to certain


noun types due to lexicalization. Under this point of view, definiteness
does not play a role in the selection of a definite article more than the
lexical entry attached to the article.[clarification needed][1][2]

Some languages (such as the continental North Germanic


languages, Bulgarian or Romanian) have definite articles only as suffixes.

Indefinite article
[edit]

An indefinite article is an article that marks an indefinite noun phrase.


Indefinite articles are those such as English "a" or "an", which do not refer
to a specific identifiable entity. Indefinites are commonly used to introduce
a new discourse referent which can be referred back to in subsequent
discussion:

1. A monster ate a cookie. His name is Cookie Monster.

Indefinites can also be used to generalize over entities who have some
property in common:

1. A cookie is a wonderful thing to eat.

Indefinites can also be used to refer to specific entities whose precise


identity is unknown or unimportant.

1. A monster must have broken into my house last night and


eaten all my cookies.
2. A friend of mine told me that happens frequently to people
who live on Sesame Street.

Indefinites also have predicative uses:

1. Leaving my door unlocked was a bad decision.

Indefinite noun phrases are widely studied within linguistics, in particular


because of their ability to take exceptional scope.

Proper article
[edit]

A proper article indicates that its noun is proper, and refers to a unique
entity. It may be the name of a person, the name of a place, the name of a
planet, etc. The Māori language has the proper article a, which is used for
personal nouns; so, "a Pita" means "Peter". In Māori, when the personal
nouns have the definite or indefinite article as an important part of it, both
articles are present; for example, the phrase "a Te Rauparaha", which
contains both the proper article a and the definite article Te refers to the
person name Te Rauparaha.

The definite article is sometimes also used with proper names, which are
already specified by definition (there is just one of them). For example: the
Amazon, the Hebrides. In these cases, the definite article may be
considered superfluous. Its presence can be accounted for by the
assumption that they are shorthand for a longer phrase in which the name
is a specifier, i.e. the Amazon River, the Hebridean Islands.[citation needed] Where
the nouns in such longer phrases cannot be omitted, the definite article is
universally kept: the United States, the People's Republic of China.

This distinction can sometimes become a political matter: the former


usage the Ukraine stressed the word's Russian meaning of "borderlands";
as Ukraine became a fully independent state following the collapse of the
Soviet Union, it requested that formal mentions of its name omit the
article. Similar shifts in usage have occurred in the names of Sudan and
both Congo (Brazzaville) and Congo (Kinshasa); a move in the other
direction occurred with The Gambia. In certain languages, such as French
and Italian, definite articles are used with all or most names of
countries: la France, le Canada, l'Allemagne; l'Italia, la Spagna, il Brasile.

If a name [has] a definite article, e.g. the Kremlin, it cannot idiomatically be


used without it: we cannot say Boris Yeltsin is in Kremlin.

— R. W. Burchfield[3]

Some languages use definite articles with personal names, as


in Portuguese (a Maria, literally: "the Maria"), Greek (η Μαρία, ο
Γιώργος, ο Δούναβης, η Παρασκευή), and Catalan (la Núria, el/en Oriol).
Such usage also occurs colloquially or dialectally
in Spanish, German, French, Italian and other languages. In Hungarian,
the colloquial use of definite articles with personal names, though
widespread, is considered to be a Germanism.

The definite article sometimes appears in American English nicknames


such as "the Donald", referring to current president Donald Trump, and
"the Gipper", referring to former president Ronald Reagan.[4]

Partitive article
[edit]

A partitive article is a type of article, sometimes viewed as a type of


indefinite article, used with a mass noun such as water, to indicate a non-
specific quantity of it. Partitive articles are a class of determiner; they are
used in French and Italian in addition to definite and indefinite articles.
(In Finnish and Estonian, the partitive is indicated by inflection.) The
nearest equivalent in English is some, although it is classified as
a determiner, and English uses it less than French uses de.

French: Veux-tu du café ?


Do you want (some) coffee?
For more information, see the article on the French partitive article.

Haida has a partitive article (suffixed -gyaa) referring to "part of


something or... to one or more objects of a given group or
category," e.g., tluugyaa uu hal tlaahlaang "he is making a boat
(a member of the category of boats)."[5]

Negative article
[edit]

A negative article specifies none of its noun, and can thus be


regarded as neither definite nor indefinite. On the other hand,
some consider such a word to be a simple determiner rather
than an article. In English, this function is fulfilled by no, which
can appear before a singular or plural noun:

No man has been on this island.


No dogs are allowed here.
No one is in the room.

In German, the negative article is, among other


variations, kein, in opposition to the indefinite
article ein.

Ein Hund – a dog


Kein Hund – no dog

The equivalent in Dutch is geen:

een hond – a dog


geen hond – no dog
Zero article
[edit]
See also: Zero article in English

The zero article is the absence of an


article. In languages having a definite
article, the lack of an article
specifically indicates that the noun is
indefinite. Linguists interested in X-bar
theory causally link zero articles to
nouns lacking a determiner.[6] In
English, the zero article rather than
the indefinite is used
with plurals and mass nouns,
although the word "some" can be
used as an indefinite plural article.

Visitors end up walking in mud.

Crosslinguistic

variation
[edit]

Articles in languages in and


around Europe
indefinite and definite articles
only definite articles
indefinite and suffixed definite
articles
only suffixed definite articles
no articles
Articles are found in many Indo-
European languages, Semitic
languages, Polynesian languages,
and even language isolates such
as Basque; however, they are
formally absent from many of the
world's major languages
including Chinese, Japanese, Kor
ean, Mongolian, Tibetan,
many Turkic
languages (including Tatar, Bashki
r, Tuvan and Chuvash),
many Uralic
languages (incl. Finnic[a] and Saam
i languages), Hindi-Urdu, Punjabi,
the Dravidian
languages (incl. Tamil, Telugu,
and Kannada), the Baltic
languages, the majority of Slavic
languages, the Bantu
languages (incl. Swahili). In some
languages that do have articles,
such as some North Caucasian
languages, the use of articles is
optional; however, in others like
English and German it is
mandatory in all cases.

Linguists believe the common


ancestor of the Indo-European
languages, Proto-Indo-European,
did not have articles. Most of the
languages in this family do not
have definite or indefinite articles:
there is no article
in Latin or Sanskrit, nor in some
modern Indo-European
languages, such as the families
of Slavic languages (except
for Bulgarian and Macedonian,
which are rather distinctive among
the Slavic languages in their
grammar, and some Northern
Russian dialects[7]), Baltic
languages and many Indo-Aryan
languages.
Although Classical Greek had a
definite article (which has survived
into Modern Greek and which
bears strong functional
resemblance to the German
definite article, which it is related
to), the earlier Homeric
Greek used this article largely as a
pronoun or demonstrative,
whereas the earliest known form
of Greek known as Mycenaean
Greek did not have any articles.
Articles developed independently
in several language families.

Not all languages have both


definite and indefinite articles, and
some languages have different
types of definite and indefinite
articles to distinguish finer shades
of meaning: for
example, French and Italian have
a partitive article used for
indefinite mass nouns,
whereas Colognian has two
distinct sets of definite articles
indicating focus and uniqueness,
and Macedonian uses definite
articles in a demonstrative sense,
with a tripartite distinction
(proximal, medial, distal) based on
distance from the speaker or
interlocutor. The
words this and that (and their
plurals, these and those) can be
understood in English as,
ultimately, forms of the definite
article the (whose declension in
Old English included thaes, an
ancestral form of this/that and
these/those).

In many languages, the form of


the article may vary according to
the gender, number, or case of its
noun. In some languages the
article may be the only indication
of the case. Many languages do
not use articles at all, and may use
other ways of indicating old versus
new information, such as topic–
comment constructions.

Tables
[edit]

Variations of articles in
definiteness and inflection among
major languages

Cas
Ind Nu
De Gen e-
efi mb
fini dere infl
nit ere
te d ect
e d
ed

Afrika Yes Yes No No No


ans

Yes
, as
Albani
su Yes Yes No Yes
an
ffix
es

Yes Yes
, as , as
Arabic pre su No No No
fixe ffix
s es

Yes
, as
Arme
su No No No No
nian
ffix
es

Yes
, as
Basqu
su Yes No Yes Yes
e
ffix
es

Belaru
No No No No No
sian

Benga Yes Yes No Yes No


li , as
su
ffix
es

Onl
y
Yes ma
, as scu
Bulgar
su No Yes Yes lin
ian
ffix e
es sin
gul
ar

Catala
Yes Yes Yes Yes No
n

Chine
No No No No No
se

Czech No No No No No

Cas
Ind Nu
De Gen e-
efi mb
fini dere infl
nit ere
te d ect
e d
ed

Danis Yes Yes Yes Yes No


h , (if
bef defi
ore nite
adj )
ec
tiv
es
or
as
su
ffix
es

No,
exc
ept
Yes
Yes for
(if
(if the
Dutch Yes Yes defi
defi ge
nite
nite) niti
)
ve
cas
e

Englis
Yes Yes No No No
h

Esper
Yes No No No No
anto

Estoni
No No No No No
an

Finnis
No No No No No
h[a]

Frenc Yes Yes Yes Yes No


h (if
sing
ular)

Georg
No No No No No
ian

Yes
(if
Germ
Yes Yes Yes defi Yes
an
nite
)

Yes
(if
Greek Yes Yes Yes defi Yes
nite
)

Guara
Yes No No Yes No
ni

Cas
Ind Nu
De Gen e-
efi mb
fini dere infl
nit ere
te d ect
e d
ed

Yes
(if
Hawai
Yes Yes No defi No
ian
nite
)
Yes
, as
Hebre
pre No No No No
w
fixe
s

Hunga
Yes Yes No No No
rian

Yes
, as
Icelan
su No Yes Yes Yes
dic
ffix
es

Interli
Yes Yes No No No
ngua

Irish Yes No Yes Yes Yes

Italian Yes Yes Yes Yes No

Japan
No No No No No
ese

Korea
No No No No No
n

Latvia
No No No No No
n
Cas
Ind Nu
De Gen e-
efi mb
fini dere infl
nit ere
te d ect
e d
ed

Lithua
No No No No No
nian

Yes
Mace , as
donia su No Yes Yes No
n ffix
es

Yes
, as
su
ffix
es
Malay in
/ the
Yes No No No
Indon coll
esian oq
uia
l
lan
gu
age

Nepali No Yes Yes Yes No

Norw Yes Yes Yes Yes No


egian , (if
bef
ore
adj
ec
tiv defi
es nite
or )
as
su
ffix
es

Pasht
No Yes Yes No Yes
o

Mi
ght
be
use
Persia
d Yes No No No
n
op
tio
nal
ly

Polish No No No No No

Portu
Yes Yes Yes Yes No
guese

Roma Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes


nian , as
su
ffix
es

Russia
No No No No No
n

Sansk
No No No No No
rit

Scottis
h Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Gaelic

Cas
Ind Nu
De Gen e-
efi mb
fini dere infl
nit ere
te d ect
e d
ed

Serbo-
Croati No No No No No
an

Slovak No No No No No

Slove
No No No No No
ne

Somal Yes No Yes No Yes


i , as
su
ffix
es

Spanis
Yes Yes Yes Yes No
h

Swahil
No No No No No
i

Yes
,
bef
ore
adj Yes
ec (if
Swedi
tiv Yes Yes defi No
sh
es nite
or )
as
su
ffix
es

Tamil No No No No No

Thai No No No No No

Toki
No No No No No
Pona

Turkis No Mi No No No
h ght
be
use
d
op
tio
nal
ly

Ukrai
No No No No No
nian

Vietna
Yes No No No No
mese

Cau
ses i
nitia
l
cons
ona
nt
mut
Welsh Yes No No No
atio
n to
sing
ular
femi
nine
nou
ns

Yiddis Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes


h (if
defi
nite
)

Cas
Ind Nu
De Gen e-
efi mb
fini dere infl
nit ere
te d ect
e d
ed

The articles used in some


languages

par
Lang titiv
definite indefinit
uag e
article e article
e artic
le

Abk
a- — -k
haz

Afrik
die — 'n
aans

-a, -ja, -i, -


ri, -ni, -u, -
t, -in, -un, -
Alba n, -rin, -nin,
disa një
nian -në, -ën, -s,
-së, -ës, -të,
-it, -ët (all
suffixes)
Arab al- or el ‫ال‬
— -n
ic (prefix)

-ը -ë
(inbetween
Arm
consonants
enia — մի mi
), -ն -n
n
(elsewhere
)

-tû, -ta, -ti, êta, êkh


Assa -khôn, - ôn, êzôn
mes khini, -zôn, — , êzôni,
e -zôni, -dal, êdal, êz
-zûpa etc. ûpa etc.

একটি,
-টা, -টি, -
একটা,
গুলো, -রা,
Ben কোন
-খানা (-ṭa, —
gali (ekôṭi,
-ṭi, -gulo, -
ekôṭa,
ra, -khana)
konô)

Bret un, ul, u


an, al, ar —
on r

Bulg -та, -то, - няк един/


aria ът, -ят, - олк някакъв
n те (all о ,
suffixes) една/ня
каква,
едно/ня
какво,
едни/ня
какви

el, la, l', els,


un, una
Cata les
— uns, une
lan ses, lo, los,
s
es, sa

Corn
an — —
ish

Singular: -
en, -n -et, -
t (all

Dani suffixes)
— en, et
sh Plural: -
ene, -
ne (all
suffixes)

de, het ('t);


archaic
since
1945/46
Dutc
but still — een ('n)
h
used in
names and
idioms: des
, der, den
Engli
the — a, an
sh
Espe
rant la — —
o
Finni
sh (c
ollo se — yks(i)
quial
)[a]
de,
d', d
u, d
Fren un, une,
le, la, l', les e
ch des
la, d
es,
de l'
ein, eine
der, die, da
, einer, e
Ger s
— ines
man des, dem, d
einem, e
en
inen
ένας,
Gree ο, η, το
— μια,
k οι, οι, τα
ένα
Haw ka, ke
— he
aiian nā
Hebr ha- ‫ה‬
— —
ew (prefix)
Hun
garia a, az — egy
n
Icela -(i)nn, -(i)n, — —
ndic -(i)ð, -(i)na,
-num, -
(i)nni, -nu,
-(i)ns, -
(i)nnar, -
nir, -nar, -
(u)num, -
nna (all
suffixes)
Inte
rling le — un
ua
an, na, a'
(used
Irish —
colloquially
)
del,
dell
o, d
ella,
dell'
Italia il, lo, la, l' un, uno,
dei,
n i, gli, le una, un'
degl
i, de
gl',
dell
e
Khas u, ka, i
— —
i ki
hen
Kurd -eke dê, -êk
ish -ekan birr -anêk
ê
Latin — — —
däe
Luxe den, déi
rs/ en, eng
mbo (d'), dat
es, engem,
urgis (d')
däe enger
h dem, der
r/er
Mac -от -ов - нек еден ед
edo он -та -ва олк на едно
nian -на -то - у едни
во -но
-те -ве -не
-та -ва -
на (all
suffixes)
Man
y, yn, 'n, ny — —
x
-nya (collo
Mal quial),
ay a before
se- (+
nd I names: si (
— classifier
ndo usually
s)
nesi informal), s
an ang (more
formal)
te (singular he (also
Māo
), ngā (plur — for
ri
al) "some")
(i)l-, (i)ċ-, (i
)d-, (i)n-, (i)
Malt r-, (i)s-, (i)t-
— —
ese , (i)x-, (i)z-,
(i)ż- (all
prefixes)
euta, eu
ti, ek, an
ek, kuna
i
Nep एउटा,
— —
ali एउटी,
एक, अ
नेक,
कुनै

Nor Singular: - — en, et, ei


wegi en, -et, -a
(all
suffixes)
an ( Plural: -
Bok ene, -
mål) a (all
suffixes)

Singular: -
en, -et, -a
Nor (all
wegi suffixes)
an Plural: - ein, eit,

(Nyn ane, - ei
orsk ene, -
) a (all
suffixes)

Papi
ame e — un
nto
yaow, y
aowə, y
Pash aowa, y
— —
to aowey
‫ يوه‬, ‫ يؤه‬,‫يو‬
‫ يوې‬,

in, ye(k) (pr


ān (preposi epositiv
Persi
tive) — e)
an
-e (suffixed -i (suffix
) ed)
um, um
Port
o, a a
ugu —
os, as uns, um
ese
as
Que i, in, 'n — —
nya
-(u)l, -le, - un, o
Rom (u)a unui, un
ania -(u)lui, -i, - — ei
n lor (all niște, u
suffixes) nor
Scot
the — a
s
Sco
an, am, a',
ttish
na, nam, n — —
Gael
an
ic
Sind i, in, -in, -n,
— —
arin en
un, una
Span el, la, lo,
— unos, un
ish los, las
as
Singular: -
en, -n, -et,
-t (all
suffixes)
Swe
Plural: - — en, ett
dish
na, -a, -
en (all
suffixes)

Wels
y, yr, -'r — —
h
‫( דער‬der), ‫( ַא‬a),
Yiddi ‫( די‬di), ‫( ַאן‬an)

sh ‫( דָאס‬dos),
‫( דעם‬dem)

1. ^ Jump up
to:a b c Grammatically
speaking Finnish has
no articles, but the
words se (it)
and yks(i) (one) are
used in colloquial
Finnish in the same
fashion
as the and a/an in
English and are, for all
intents and purposes,
treated like articles
when used in this
manner.

The following examples show


articles which are always suffixed
to the noun:

 Albanian: zog, a
bird; zogu, the bird
 Aramaic: ‫( שלם‬shalam),
peace; ‫( שלמא‬shalma),
the peace
 Note:
Aramaic is
written from
right to left,
so
an Aleph is
added to the
end of the
word. ‫ם‬
becomes ‫מ‬
when it is not
the final
letter.
 Assamese: "কিতাপ
(kitap)", book;
"কিতাপখন (kitapkhôn)":
"The book"
 Bengali: "বই (bôi)",
book;
"বইটি (bôiti)/বইটা (bôita
)/বইখানা (bôikhana)" :
"The Book"
 Bulgarian: стол stol,
chair; столът stolǎt, the
chair (subject);
стола stola, the chair
(object)
 Danish: hus,
house; huset, the
house; if there is an
adjective: det gamle
hus, the old house
 Icelandic: hestur,
horse; hesturinn, the
horse
 Macedonian: стол stol,
chair; столот stolot, the
chair; столов stolov,
this chair;
столон stolon, that
chair
 Persian: sib, apple.
(There is no definite
articles in the Standard
Persian. It has one
indefinite article 'yek'
that means 'one'.
In Standard Persian, if a
noun is not indefinite, it
is a definite noun. 'Sib e'
man' means 'my apple'.
Here, 'e' is like 'of' in
English, so literally 'sib
e man' means 'the
apple of mine'.
However, in Iranian
Persian, "-e" is used as
a definite article, quite
different from Standard
Persian. pesar,
boy; pesare, the
boy; pesare in'o be'm
dād, the boy gave me
this.)
 Romanian: drum,
road; drumul, the road
(the article is just "l", "u"
is a
"connection vowel" Rom
anian: vocală de
legătură)
 Swedish and Norwegian
: hus, house; huset, the
house; if there is an
adjective: det gamle
(N)/gamla (S) huset, the
old house

Examples of prefixed definite


articles:

 Hebrew: ‫ילד‬, transcribed


as yeled, a boy; ‫הילד‬,
transcribed as hayeled,
the boy
 Maltese: ktieb, a
book; il-ktieb, the
book; Maltese: għotja, a
donation; l-għotja, the
donation; Maltese: ċave
tta, a key; iċ-ċavetta,
the key; Maltese: dar, a
house; id-dar, the
house; Maltese: nemla,
an ant; in-nemla, the
ant; Maltese: ras, a
head; ir-ras, the
head; Maltese: sodda, a
bed; is-sodda, the
bed; Maltese: tuffieħa,
an apple; it-tuffieħa, the
apple; Maltese: xahar, a
month; ix-xahar, the
month; Maltese: zunnari
ja, a carrot; iz-zunnarija,
the
carrot; Maltese: żmien,
a time; iż-żmien, the
time

A different way, limited to the


definite article, is used
by Latvian and Lithuanian. The
noun does not change but the
adjective can be defined or
undefined. In Latvian: galds, a
table / the table; balts galds, a
white table; baltais galds, the
white table. In Lithuanian: stalas, a
table / the table; baltas stalas, a
white table; baltasis stalas, the
white table.

Languages in the above table


written in italics are constructed
languages and are not natural,
that is to say that they have been
purposefully invented by an
individual (or group of individuals)
with some purpose in mind.

Tokelauan
[edit]
This section
may lend und
ue weight to
Tokelauan,
we should
not give a
separate
lengthy
section to all
languages,
much less to
Tokelauan out
of all. Please
help to create
a more
balanced
presentation.
Discuss
and resolve th
is issue before
removing this
message. (Dec
ember 2023)

When using a definite article


in Tokelauan language, unlike in
some languages like English, if the
speaker is speaking of an item,
they need not have referred to it
previously as long as the item is
specific.[8] This is also true when it
comes to the reference of a
specific person.[8] So, although the
definite article used to describe a
noun in the Tokelauan language
is te, it can also translate to the
indefinite article in languages that
requires the item being spoken of
to have been referenced prior.
[8]
When translating to
English, te could translate to the
English definite article the, or it
could also translate to the English
indefinite article a.[8] An example of
how the definite article te can be
used as an interchangeable
definite or indefinite article in the
Tokelauan language would be the
sentence “Kua hau te tino”.[8] In the
English language, this could be
translated as “A man has arrived”
or “The man has arrived” where
using te as the article in this
sentence can represent any man
or a particular man.[8] The word he,
which is the indefinite article in
Tokelauan, is used to describe
‘any such item’, and is
encountered most often with
negatives and interrogatives.[8] An
example of the use of he as an
indefinite article is “Vili ake oi
k'aumai he toki ”, where ‘he toki ’
mean ‘an axe’.[8] The use
of he and te in Tokelauan are
reserved for when describing a
singular noun. However, when
describing a plural noun, different
articles are used. For plural
definite nouns, rather than te, the
article nā is used.[8] ‘Vili ake oi
k'aumai nā nofoa’ in Tokelauan
would translate to “Do run and
bring me the chairs” in English.
[8]
There are some special cases in
which instead of using nā, plural
definite nouns have no article
before them. The absence of an
article is represented by 0.[8] One
way that it is usually used is if a
large amount or a specific class of
things are being described.
[8]
Occasionally, such as if one was
describing an entire class of things
in a nonspecific fashion, the
singular definite noun te would is
used.[8] In English, ‘Ko te povi e kai
mutia’ means “Cows eat grass”.
[8]
Because this is a general
statement about cows, te is used
instead of nā. The ko serves as a
preposition to the “te” The
article ni is used for describing a
plural indefinite noun. ‘E i ei ni
tuhi?’ translates to “Are there any
books?”[8]

Historical

development
[edit]

Articles often develop by


specialization
of adjectives or determiners. Their
development is often a sign of
languages becoming
more analytic instead of synthetic,
perhaps combined with the loss
of inflection as in English,
Romance languages, Bulgarian,
Macedonian and Torlakian.

Joseph Greenberg in Universals of


Human Language describes "the
cycle of the definite article":
Definite articles (Stage I) evolve
from demonstratives, and in turn
can become generic articles
(Stage II) that may be used in both
definite and indefinite contexts,
and later merely noun markers
(Stage III) that are part of nouns
other than proper names and
more recent borrowings.
Eventually articles may evolve
anew from demonstratives.[9]

Definite articles
[edit]

Definite articles typically arise


from demonstratives meaning that.
For example, the definite articles
in most Romance languages—
e.g., el, il, le, la, lo, a, o — derive
from
the Latin demonstratives ille (mas
culine), illa (feminine)
and illud (neuter).

The English definite article the,


written þe in Middle English,
derives from an Old
English demonstrative, which,
according to gender, was
written se (masculine), seo (femini
ne) (þe and þeo in the
Northumbrian dialect),
or þæt (neuter). The neuter
form þæt also gave rise to the
modern demonstrative that.
The ye occasionally seen in
pseudo-archaic usage such as
"Ye Olde Englishe Tea Shoppe" is
actually a form of þe, where the
letter thorn (þ) came to be written
as a y.

Multiple demonstratives can give


rise to multiple definite
articles. Macedonian, for example,
in which the articles are suffixed,
has столот (stolot), the
chair; столов (stolov), this chair;
and столон (stolon), that chair.
These derive from the Proto-
Slavic demonstratives *tъ "this,
that", *ovъ "this here"
and *onъ "that over there, yonder"
respectively. Colognian prepositio
ns articles such as in dat Auto,
or et Auto, the car; the first being
specifically selected, focused,
newly introduced, while the latter
is not selected, unfocused, already
known, general, or generic.

Standard Basque distinguishes


between proximal and distal
definite articles in the plural
(dialectally, a proximal singular
and an additional medial grade
may also be present). The Basque
distal form (with infix -a-,
etymologically a suffixed and
phonetically reduced form of the
distal demonstrative har-/hai-)
functions as the default definite
article, whereas the proximal form
(with infix -o-, derived from the
proximal demonstrative hau-/hon-)
is marked and indicates some kind
of (spatial or otherwise) close
relationship between the speaker
and the referent (e.g., it may imply
that the speaker is included in the
referent): etxeak ("the houses")
vs. etxeok ("these houses [of
ours]"), euskaldunak ("the Basque
speakers") vs. euskaldunok ("we,
the Basque speakers").

Speakers of Assyrian Neo-


Aramaic, a modern Aramaic
language that lacks a definite
article, may at times use
demonstratives aha and aya (femi
nine) or awa (masculine) – which
translate to "this" and "that",
respectively – to give the sense of
"the".[10] In Indonesian, the third
person possessive suffix -
nya could be also used as a
definite article.[11]

Indefinite articles
[edit]

Indefinite articles typically arise


from adjectives meaning one. For
example, the indefinite articles in
the Romance languages—
e.g., un, una, une—derive from
the Latin adjective unus. Partitive
articles, however, derive
from Vulgar Latin de illo,
meaning (some) of the.

The English indefinite article an is


derived from the same root
as one. The -n came to be
dropped before consonants, giving
rise to the shortened form a. The
existence of both forms has led to
many cases of juncture loss, for
example transforming the
original a napron into the
modern an apron.

The Persian indefinite article


is yek, meaning one.

See also
[edit]

 English articles
 Al- (definite article in
Arabic)
 Definiteness
 Definite description
 False title

References
[edit]

1. ^ Recasens,
Marta; Martí, M.
Antònia; Taulé,
Mariona (2009-06-
16), Winkler,
Susanne;
Featherston, Sam
(eds.), "First-mention
definites:More than
exceptional
cases", The Fruits of
Empirical Linguistics
II, vol. 102, Berlin,
New York: Mouton de
Gruyter, pp. 217–
238, doi:10.1515/978
3110216158.217, ISB
N 978-3-11-021347-8,
retrieved 2023-01-16
2. ^ New perspectives
on Hispanic contact :
linguistics in the
Americas. Melvin
González-Rivera, and
Sandro Sessarego.
Madrid:
Iberoamericana.
2015. ISBN 978-3-
95487-831-4. OCLC
969386958.
3. ^ Burchfield, R.
W. (1996). The New
Fowler's Modern
English
Usage (3rd ed.).
Oxford University
Press.
p. 512. ISBN 978-
0199690367.
4. ^ Argetsinger, Amy (1
September
2015). "Why does
everyone call Donald
Trump 'The Donald'?
It's an interesting
story". The
Washington Post.
Retrieved 3
October 2017.
5. ^ Lawrence, Erma
(1977). Haida
dictionary. Fairbanks:
Alaska Native
Language Center.
p. 64.
6. ^ Master, Peter
(1997). "The English
article system:
Acquisition, function,
and
pedagogy". System. 2
5 (2): 215–232. do
i:10.1016/S0346-
251X(97)00010-9.
7. ^ Kusmenko, J
K. "The typology of
the language contact
on the Balkans and in
Scandinavia. A case
of the suffixed definite
article" (PDF). Archive
d (PDF) from the
original on 2021-10-
04. See s.5 Summary.
Retrieved 2 February
2012.
8. ^ Jump up
to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Si
mona, Ropati
(1986). Tokelau
Dictionary. New
Zealand: Office of
Tokelau Affairs.
p. Introduction.
9. ^ Greenberg, Joseph
H. (2005). Genetic
linguistics : essays on
theory and method.
William Croft. Oxford:
Oxford University
Press. ISBN 978-0-
19-151452-4. OCLC
132691297.
10. ^ Solomon, Zomaya
S. (1997). Functional
and other exotic
sentences in Assyrian
Aramaic, Journal of
Assyrian Academic
Studies, XI/2:44-69.
11. ^ "20 Contoh
Penggunaan Kata nya
dalam
Kalimat". kumparan.c
om. Retrieved 2024-
05-26.

External links
[edit]

Look up article, definite article,


or indefinite article in Wiktionary, the
free dictionary.
Wikisource has the text of the
1921 Collier's
Encyclopedia article Article.

 "The Definite Article,


'The': The Most
Frequently Used Word
in World's Englishes"
 Ing, John (September
17, 2019). "How to Use
Articles Correctly in
English (A, An & The)".
Retrieved May 3, 2020.
show

Lexical categories and their features


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Categories:
 Grammar
 Parts of speech

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