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Lesson 2: Articles (Definite and Indefinite) in Greek

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- Basic Grammar

Lesson 2: Articles (Definite and Indefinite) in Greek

  • February 1, 2025
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Lesson 2 Articles (Definite and Indefinite) in Greek

Articles are essential in Greek grammar because they indicate the gender and number of a noun. In this lesson, you will learn about definite and indefinite articles and how to use them correctly in sentences.


 

1. The Definite Article (“The”) in Greek

The definite article in Greek changes depending on the gender (masculine, feminine, neuter) and number (singular, plural) of the noun.

GenderSingularPlural
Masculineο (o)οι (i)
Feminineη (i)οι (i)
Neuterτο (to)τα (ta)

Examples:

  • Ο άντρας (O ándras) – The man (masculine, singular)
  • Η γυναίκα (I yinéka) – The woman (feminine, singular)
  • Το παιδί (To paidí) – The child (neuter, singular)
  • Οι άντρες (I ándres) – The men (masculine, plural)
  • Οι γυναίκες (I yinékes) – The women (feminine, plural)
  • Τα παιδιά (Ta pediá) – The children (neuter, plural)

 

2. The Indefinite Article (“A/An”) in Greek

Unlike English, Greek does not have plural indefinite articles (equivalent to “some” in English). Instead, Greek only has singular indefinite articles:

GenderSingular
Masculineένας (énas)
Feminineμία/μια (mía/mia)
Neuterένα (éna)

Examples:

  • Ένας άντρας (Énas ándras) – A man (masculine, singular)
  • Μία γυναίκα (Mía yinéka) – A woman (feminine, singular, formal)
  • Μια γυναίκα (Mia yinéka) – A woman (feminine, singular, informal)
  • Ένα παιδί (Éna paidí) – A child (neuter, singular)

 

3. How to Use Articles in Sentences

Definite Articles in Sentences

  • Ο σκύλος είναι μεγάλος.
    (O skílos íne megálos.) – The dog is big.

  • Η πόρτα είναι ανοιχτή.
    (I pórta íne anichtí.) – The door is open.

  • Το βιβλίο είναι ενδιαφέρον.
    (To vivlío íne endiaféron.) – The book is interesting.

Indefinite Articles in Sentences

  • Ένας φίλος με επισκέφτηκε.
    (Énas fílos me episkéftike.) – A friend visited me.

  • Μια καρέκλα είναι σπασμένη.
    (Mia karékla íne spasméni.) – A chair is broken.

  • Ένα σπίτι στην εξοχή είναι ήσυχο.
    (Éna spíti stin exochí íne ísycho.) – A house in the countryside is quiet.


 

4. Key Differences Between Definite and Indefinite Articles

English SentenceDefinite Article (Greek)Indefinite Article (Greek)
The boy is playing.Το αγόρι παίζει. (To agóri pézi.)A boy is playing. → Ένα αγόρι παίζει. (Éna agóri pézi.)
The girl is singing.Η κοπέλα τραγουδάει. (I kopéla tragoudái.)A girl is singing. → Μια κοπέλα τραγουδάει. (Mia kopéla tragoudái.)
The table is big.Το τραπέζι είναι μεγάλο. (To trapézi íne megálo.)A table is big. → Ένα τραπέζι είναι μεγάλο. (Éna trapézi íne megálo.)

 

5. Practice Exercises

Exercise 1: Fill in the Blanks

Fill in the blanks with the correct definite or indefinite article:

  1. ___ παιδί διαβάζει ένα βιβλίο. (The child is reading a book.)
  2. ___ γυναίκα πίνει καφέ. (A woman is drinking coffee.)
  3. ___ τραπέζι είναι στρογγυλό. (The table is round.)
  4. ___ άντρας έχει ένα αυτοκίνητο. (A man has a car.)
  5. ___ σκύλος τρέχει στον δρόμο. (The dog is running on the street.)

Exercise 2: Translate to Greek

Translate the following sentences into Greek using the correct articles:

  1. The man is tall.
  2. A cat is sleeping.
  3. The house has a big garden.
  4. A teacher is talking.
  5. The books are on the table.

Exercise 3: Correct the Mistakes

Identify and correct the mistakes in the following sentences:

  1. Το σκύλος είναι καφέ. (Incorrect)
  2. Μία αγόρι παίζει. (Incorrect)
  3. Ένας γυναίκα μαγειρεύει. (Incorrect)

 

6. Common Mistakes and Tips

  1. Confusing the Definite and Indefinite Articles

    • Remember: ο, η, το = “The”
    • ένας, μία/μια, ένα = “A/An”
  2. Gender Agreement

    • Articles must match the gender of the noun they modify.
      • Ο σκύλος (The dog – masculine)
      • Η γάτα (The cat – feminine)
      • Το πουλί (The bird – neuter)
  3. Using Μια vs. Μία

    • Μια is the informal and most commonly used form.
    • Μία is slightly more formal or used for emphasis.

 

7. Cultural Note

Greek articles are always used with nouns, unlike in English, where they can sometimes be omitted. In Greek, you rarely say just “γάτα” (cat); instead, you say “η γάτα” (the cat) unless speaking in very general terms.


 

8. Summary of Key Points

✅ Greek has definite (ο, η, το) and indefinite (ένας, μία/μια, ένα) articles.
✅ Articles must agree with the gender and number of the noun.
✅ Μια (common) and μία (formal/emphasized) are interchangeable.
✅ Greek nouns almost always require an article before them.

 

 

Tags:
Greek A1 levelGreek articlesGreek definite and indefinite articlesGreek for beginnersGreek grammar basicsGreek grammar rulesGreek language practiceGreek noun genderGreek sentence structurelearn Greek articles
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