The Netherlands
There are two: the definite article the, and the indefinite article an ( reduced to a before a consonant sound).
In general, no. If you are refering to the letter as a letter, it takes no article. For example, "O resembles a circle," or, "There are two es in definite." However, if you are refering to a specific letter, a definite article is needed, as in, "The e you drew looks like an a."
'Il ritorno' is an Italian equivalent of 'The return'.The masculine singular definite article 'il' means 'the'. The masculine noun 'ritorno' means 'the return'. The masculine singular definite article is 'un, uno' ['a, one'].Together, they're pronounced 'eel ree-TOHR-noh'.
'Cortador de relva' is a Portuguese equivalent of 'lawn mower'.The masculine noun 'cortador' means '[pair of] clippers, cutters, shears'. Its singular definite article is 'o'['the'], and its singular indefinite article 'um' ['a, one']. The preposition 'de' means 'of, from'. The feminine noun 'relva' means 'grass, lawn, turf'. Its singular definite article is 'a', and its singular indefinite article 'uma'.
Grandparents is the English equivalent of 'nonni'.The Italian word is a masculine noun. Its plural definite article is 'i' ['the'], and its plural indefinite article 'dei' ['some]. It's pronounced 'NOHN-nee'
The is the definite article.
The definite article is an / na
"The" is a definite article, "world" is a noun.
The definite article is 'the' in all sentences or where ever it is used. It's the only definite article in English.
In English the word 'the' is called the definite article. 'A' or 'an' is the indefinite article.
indefinite
Is a solid a definite or indefinite
'la' is the definite (feminine, singular) article in French
It's an indefinite article which is a type of determiner that precedes a noun. "A" and "An" are indefinite articles, and "The" is a definite article.
Was is not an article. It's a past tense for of to be.
"The" is the definite article
Der, die and das are the German equivalent of the English definite article the.German nouns are divided into three genders:feminine, with the definite article die and indefinite article eine,masculine, with the definite article der and indefinite article ein, andneuter, with the definite article das and indefinite article ein,