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Katy Joy
Differences between De and Le
I am having trouble with the french articles like "du", "de", and "le". The article "du" is basically a combination of "de" and "le", right? And what is the difference between "de" and "le"? I sometimes think that "de" means the same thing as the english work "of" but when I read a sentence like this: "Je n'ai pas de lait," I do not know how to understand it. Does the meaning of "de" depend on the content of the sentence?
1 dec. 2012 04:41
Antwoorden · 6
1
de and le are different. de is a preposition and le is an article. la and les are also articles.
de + an article means "from the", "of the" or "some of".
de + le = du
de + la = de la
de + les = des
de + l' = de l'
Milk is masculine, le lait - some milk is de + le lait = du lait.
Je n'ai pas du lait EDIT: This is wrong! See comment below
That means "I do not have some milk" or more naturally "I do not have any milk"
EDIT: I just checked and Je n'ai pas de lait is also correct. So now I am a bit confused too.
1 december 2012
Ah! I'm so confused. T.T
30 januari 2013
No, de is not an article!!! It's a preposition.
29 januari 2013
je n'ai pas de lait
translation, I don't have any wilk
de is an "article" like "the"
9 januari 2013
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Katy Joy
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Koreaans, Spaans
Taal die wordt geleerd
Koreaans
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