Italian definite articles

Italian loves its articles and I am sure after this little guide you will love them too.

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Let’s start from the very beginning. What is an article? An article is that little word that you can find before a noun. Think of words like “the table”, “the island”, “the elephant” - “the” is the article, the  definite article actually. You can also say “a table”, “a street”, “an elephant” and those are articles too, but we have talked about them before, here

Articles distinguish the generic from the specific, the known from the unknown:

Puoi vedere un cane dalla finestra = You can see a dog from the window. [unknown dog]

Puoi vedere il cane dalla finestra = You can see the dog from the window. [our dog or a dog we know about]

Now let's focus on the second type, these ‘specific or definite articles’. 

il - lo - l’ - i - gli (mas) 

la - l’ - le (fem)

In Italian the form of the article has to agree with the gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural) of the noun it is attached to. But it also depends on the initial letter of the word which follows. We have definite articles both for singular and plural nouns. How can we decide which one we need?

First of all, we have to know if our word is masculine or feminine [how? - head here for gender of Italian nouns]. 

Feminine nouns (LA, L’, LE)

Is it a feminine word? Does it start with a consonant (B, C, D, F, …)? Then you need the article LA:

casa = house —— la casa = the house

macchina = car —— la macchina = the car

voce = voice —— la voce = the voice

When we turn these nouns into the plural, the article LA becomes LE:

la casa (the house) — le case (the houses)

la macchina (the car) — le macchine (the cars)

la voce (the voice) — le voci (the voices)

Is it a feminine word? Yes. Is it starting with a vowel (A, E, I, O, U)? Then you need the article L’ .

[do you see that little apostrophe? In Italian we don't like the sound of two vowels one immediately after the other, so we usually drop the final vowel in the first word. L’ stands for LA, where the final A has been dropped in front of the following vowel]

insalata = salad —— l’ insalata = the salad

isola = island —— l’ isola = the island

ape = bee —— l’ ape = the bee

When we turn these nouns into the plural, the article L’ again becomes LE [no, plural articles don’t drop the first vowel, not even in front of words starting with another vowel]:

l’ insalata (the salad) — le insalate (the salads)

l’ isola (the island) — le isole (the salads)

l’ ape (the bee) — le api (the bees)

Masculine nouns (il, L’, lo, i, gli)

Is it a masculine word? Does it start with a ‘simple consonant’ (B, C, D, F, G, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V) ? Then you need the article IL:

telefono = telephone —— il telefono = the telephone

libro = book —— il libro = the book

cane = dog —— il cane = the dog

When we turn these nouns into the plural, the article IL becomes I:

il telefono (the telephone) — i telefoni (the telephones)

il libro (the book) — i libri (the books)

il cane (the dog) — i cani (the dogs)

Is it a masculine word? Does it start with a vowel (A, E, I, O, U)? Then you need the article L’:

amico = friend —— l’amico = the friend

elefante = elephant —— l’elefante = the elephant

ombrello = umbrella —— l’ombrello = the umbrella

When we turn these nouns into the plural, the article L’ becomes GLI*:

l’amico (the friend) — gli amici (the friends)

l’elefante (the elephant) — gli elefanti (the elephants)

l’ombrello (the umbrella) — gli ombrelli (the umbrellas)

Is it a masculine word? Is it starting with a ‘special consonant’? [Special consonants are: S when followed by another consonant (SB, SC, SD, ST, …) or one of the following letters (Z, X, Y, PS, PN, GN)] - Then you will use the article LO:

studente = student —— lo studente = the student

scrittore = writer —— lo scrittore = the writer

zucchino = courgette —— lo zucchino = the courgette

yogurt = yogurt —— lo yogurt = the yogurt

When we turn these nouns into the plural, the article LO becomes GLI*:

lo studente (the student) — gli studenti (the students)

lo scrittore (the writer) — gli scrittori (the writers)

lo zucchino (the courgette) — gli zucchini (the courgettes)

lo yogurt (the yogurt) — gli yogurt (the yogurts)

All clear? Let’s recap:

Feminine:

  la (s) - le (p) + when the words begin with a consonant

l’ (s) - le (p) + when the words begin with a vowel

Masculine:

il (s) - i (p) + when the words begin with a ‘simple consonant’ (B, C, D, F, G, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V)

l’ (s) - gli (p) + when the words begin with a vowel

lo (s) - gli (p) + when the words begin with [s + consonant], gn, pn, ps, x, z, y

(!) How do you pronounce “gli” in Italian?

First of all, pretend the “g” is not there. Forget about it just like you forget about the “k” in English words like “know”. The closest phonetic explanation of "gli" for English-speakers is "lyee" - "L" followed by "yee". Try it! 

NOW IT'S TIME TO PUT WHAT YOU HAVE JUST LEARNT INTO PRACTICE!

Test yourself

  1. ___ amica — ___ amiche

  2. ___ treno — ___ treni

  3. ___ scuola — ___ scuole

  4. ___ birra — ___ birre

  5. ___ panino — ___ panini

  6. ___ psicologo — ___ psicologi

  7. ___ aperitivo — ___ aperitivi

  8. ___ stadio — ___ stadi

  9. ___ idea — ___ idee

  10. ___ parco — ___ parchi

  11. ___ italiano — ___ italiani

Answers

1.    l’ / le - 2. il / i - 3. la / le - 4. la / le - 5. il / i - 6. lo / gli - 7. l’ / gli - 8. lo / gli - 9. l’ / le - 10. il / i - 11. l’ / gli