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In French, there are words that express a part of something (some or any in questions).
Learn how to say "some" in French
Look at the examples:
When things are countable (dogs, cars etc.) and you want to say some things, you use des.
Notice how in English you can omit the some: but NOT in French! See Plurals of the and a = les and des (articles) in French.
However, with uncountable things, we use du, de la, de l', des to say some, as such:
Note: Some words can be both countable and not countable, for example chocolat, can mean chocolate (in general) or chocolates (individual sweets). Depending on which it is, use the correct article, like this:
Feminine noun | la confiture | de la |
Je mange de la confiture. (I eat some jam.) |
Masculine noun | le pain | du |
Il achète du pain. |
Noun starting with a vowel |
l'huile | de l' |
Tu achètes de l'huile. (You buy some oil.) |
Plural uncountable noun |
les épinards | des |
Tu manges des épinards. (You eat some spinach.) |
J'ai des chocolats dans ma poche. (I have some chocolates in my pocket.)
Je veux du chocolat tout de suite. (I want some chocolate right now.)
Je veux du chocolat tout de suite. (I want some chocolate right now.)
ATTENTION: Partitive articles behave differently in negative sentences (ne...pas) See the related lesson: Du/de la/de l'/des all become de/d' in negative sentences (French Partitive Articles).
Grammar jargon: Names for uncountable things like milk are sometimes called mass nouns as well as uncountable nouns.
Partitive articles, du, de la, & de l' (some/any) are used with mass nouns. Definite articles (le, la, l', les) and indefinite articles (un/une/des) are used with countable nouns.
Partitive articles, du, de la, & de l' (some/any) are used with mass nouns. Definite articles (le, la, l', les) and indefinite articles (un/une/des) are used with countable nouns.
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Examples and resources
There are dogs in that park.
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