These, that, these, those are demonstratives used to point to people and things. This and that are singular, these and those are plural. They function as both determiners and pronouns
El is masculine definite article, la is feminine definite article. Words ending in -o are masculine, -a are feminine. Words describing females are feminine, vice versa
Workbook presents 23 grammar points in realistic contexts. Written by Stella Peyronel and Ian Higgins for English-speaking learners. Includes exercises, glossary, and answer keys at the end
Quiz tests proficiency in using definite (the) and indefinite (a, an) articles. Articles specify noun definiteness in English grammar. Quiz helps evaluate language skills through practice
"The" is used to talk about specific people, places or things. It's used with groups of singular nouns. It's used with countries made up of multiple lands. It's used with geography terms like oceans and rivers. It highlights unique things like universes and planets
Articles show whether something is new or known (indefinite/definite). A/an used with singular countable nouns, the with both singular and plural. The used with general nouns, inventions, places, and certain professions. No article needed with determiners like any, some, my, this