Yes. Articles are only used to show whether a single noun is a typical example or a specific example (e.g. a house or the house). But plural nouns do not use articles, and you could also use other determiners
Big houses are hard to keep clean. (adjective big, plural noun)
Many houses need cleaning. (number adjective many, plural noun)
Their house is expensive. (possessive adjective their, singular noun)
This house is a mess. (demonstrative determiner this, singular noun)
it is an adjective
'The' is an adjective, in fact it is a particular type of adjective known as an article, and it is a 'definite article' at that.
"The" is not an adjective. It is an article.
Strange is an adjective.
Strange is an adjective.
It is not technically an adjective. It is called an article, and is one of the two 'indefinite articles' - the other being "a." The third article is the definite article: "the."
"An" is not an adjective, it's an indefinite article. ("The" is a definite article.) It is sometimes called a determiner."An" is not an adjective but one of the forms of the indefinite article, the other one being "a": A dog, An apple.
The word "the" is an article, which is a type of adjective.
An article is are the following words: an, a, and the. A numeric adjective is an adjective that shows the approximate number of something without explicitly stating the exact number. For example: few, couple, some, etc.
'The' is neither an adjective nor an adverb. It is an article.
the word "the" is NOT an adjective. It IS a definite article.
The word "an" is neither an adjective or an adverb. It's an article.