Definite Articles in EnglishA1
Learn when to use the with nouns and practice clear sentences so you feel confident about definite meaning.
What translations are available?
What modules are required?
Prerequisites
Specific meaning of the
The points to one specific noun that the speaker and listener can identify. It says, in effect, “you know which one I mean.” Compare a book with the book. A book introduces any book. The book refers to a particular book that is already clear from the situation, the context, or shared knowledge. Use the when a noun is not general, but known, chosen, or already fixed in the mind. For the broader system of articles and noun reference, see Determiners and Indefinite Articles.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use the when the listener can identify the noun from the situation. | ||
| Use the when the speaker and listener know which thing is meant. | ||
| Use the for a noun that is made specific by extra information. |
Mara found a coin in the sofa and showed it to Ben. She meant one coin, not any coin in general.
Mara found (a / an / the) coin in the sofa and showed it to Ben.
First mention and repeat
A noun often takes a or an the first time it appears, then the when it appears again. The first mention introduces the thing; the second mention points back to the same thing. I saw a dog in the park. The dog was wearing a red collar. After the noun has been named, the shows that the listener should connect it with what came before. The same pattern works in longer situations too: a house on the corner, then the house with blue windows. When a noun becomes identifiable through the story, the is the natural choice. Indefinite Articles covers the first mention pattern in more detail.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| First mention | Use a or an first, then use the when the noun becomes known. | ||
| Second mention | Use the when you refer to the same noun again. | ||
| Clear shared reference | Use the when both people already understand which person or thing is being discussed. |
On the desk, I noticed a robot. Later, I talked about the same robot again.
On the desk, I noticed (a → replace the indefinite article with the definite article) robot. Later, I talked about the same robot again.
Shared and unique nouns
Use the with nouns that point to one shared, unique thing. There is one sun in our everyday view, one moon in normal speech, and one sky above us, so these nouns usually take the. The same happens with clearly named natural features: the Nile, the Alps, the Pacific Ocean, the Sahara. The name already identifies the thing, so the belongs before it. If you remove the from these phrases, the noun sounds less specific or incomplete. Some nouns are unique because the world makes them so, not because the sentence has mentioned them before.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use the for things that are unique in the world. | ||
| Use the for moon when you mean the one that Earth has. | ||
| Use the with river names and mountain ranges. | ||
| Use the with seas, oceans, and deserts when they are named as specific places. |
At midnight, everyone in the campsite pointed upward at one glowing thing in the sky.
At midnight, everyone in the campsite pointed upward at (a / the / some) glowing thing in the sky.
Names with the
Some proper names use the as part of the name itself. This happens with many geographical names, especially plural country names like the United States and the Netherlands, and with names made from a common noun plus a descriptive phrase, like the United Kingdom or the Ivory Coast in some styles. The also appears with oceans, seas, rivers, mountain ranges, deserts, and groups of islands, such as the Atlantic, the Thames, the Andes, and the Bahamas. In these names, the is not describing an ordinary noun in the sentence. It is part of the fixed form of the name.
| Word | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| the Netherlands | This is the country name used with the. | ||
| the United States | This is the country name used with the. | ||
| the United Kingdom | This is the country name used with the. | ||
| the Alps | This is the mountain range name used with the. | ||
| the Amazon | This is the river name used with the. | ||
| the Pacific Ocean | This is the ocean name used with the. | ||
| the Sahara | This is the desert name used with the. | ||
| the Bronx | This is the place name used with the. | ||
| the Bronx Zoo | This is the proper name used with the. | ||
| the Crimea | This is the region name used with the. |
Ordinal numbers with the
Ordinal numbers usually take the when they identify a specific position in a sequence. Say the first train, the second chapter, the last page, the next stop. The article shows that the noun is not just any train or any chapter, but the one in a defined order. This is common with dates, rankings, instructions, and directions. The first door on the left names one door in a set. The last person to leave names one person at the end of the group. With ordinals, the comes before the number because the number itself works like a marker of exact place.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use the before an ordinal number when you identify one item in a sequence. | ||
| Use the before ordinals for floors, chapters, and dates when the item is specific. | ||
| Use the before ordinals when you point to one exact place in a list. |
Superlatives with the
Superlative adjectives normally take the because they name one thing at the top of a group. Say the best answer, the tallest building, the most important part, the worst day. The form points to one highest, lowest, strongest, or weakest item among others. Without the, the phrase is not complete in standard English. The article comes before the superlative, and the noun follows it: the fastest route, the most comfortable seat. This pattern is common with Determiners because the article marks the noun as specific before the adjective identifies its extreme position.
| Example | Pattern | |
|---|---|---|
| Use the before a superlative adjective that compares one item with all others. | ||
| Use the before a superlative noun phrase when it names one top result. | ||
| Use the even when the superlative is followed by a noun. |
Titles and job roles
Use the with a title or job role when you mean a specific known person. The doctor is waiting refers to one particular doctor in the situation. The president spoke tonight points to a specific president, not any person with that job. This pattern appears when the speaker and listener can identify the person from context, position, or shared knowledge. It also works with roles in a scene: the guard, the manager, the teacher. If the meaning is general, the article is usually omitted in other patterns, but when the person is known, the makes the reference clear.
| Usage | Explanation | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Known person | Use the with a job title when the listener knows exactly who you mean. | ||
| Public office | Use the with a title when you refer to one specific office holder. | ||
| Role in context | Use the when a role is clear from the conversation or situation. |
Plural, uncountable, and regional use
The works with plural and uncountable nouns when the meaning is specific. Say the books on the table, the water in the glass, the information you sent. The noun can be countable or uncountable, but the shows that it is a particular set, amount, or substance. General plural meaning usually does not take the: Books are expensive speaks about books in general. Water is essential speaks about water in general. Some fixed phrases also depend on region or style. British English often says at the weekend, while other forms may use different patterns in some contexts. For contrast with general noun use, compare Zero Article.
| Region | Variant | Definition | Example | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| at the weekend | This is the common British form for talking about a weekend time. | |||
| on the weekend | This is the common American form for talking about a weekend time. | |||
| in hospital | This is the usual British form when someone is a patient in a hospital. | |||
| in the hospital | This is the usual American form when someone is a patient in a hospital. | |||
| the chairs in the room | Use the with a plural noun when you mean specific ones. | |||
| the water in the glass | Use the with an uncountable noun when you mean a specific amount or thing. |
Take the Quiz!
Ya puedes usar *the* correctamente
Ya puedes choose the when you mean one specific, identifiable thing—often when it’s already known, unique, or part of a fixed name. También puedes usar a/an for first mention and then switch to the when you repeat the noun. Además, puedes usar the with ordinals, superlatives, titles/job roles, and specific plural/uncountable nouns.