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A1 Polish GrammarArticles (Definite & Indefinite)

Polish has no articles - no equivalent of 'the' or 'a/an'. Learn how Polish uses word order, demonstratives, and context to convey definiteness. This is a major simplification compared to English and other European languages.

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1No Articles in Polish

Polish has no articles - there is no word for 'the' or 'a/an'. This is one of the simplest aspects of Polish for English speakers. Context and word order indicate whether something is definite or indefinite.

Polish vs English

PolishEnglish (indefinite)English (definite)
Mam książkę.I have a book.I have the book.
Widzę psa.I see a dog.I see the dog.
To jest dom.This is a house.This is the house.
Kobieta idzie.A woman is walking.The woman is walking.

Examples

Kupuję chleb.

I am buying bread / the bread.

context determines a/the

Samochód jest czerwony.

The car is red.

no article needed

Mam problem.

I have a problem.

indefinite from context

Dziecko śpi.

The child is sleeping.

definite from context

2Demonstratives for Emphasis

When you need to emphasize 'the' or 'this/that', Polish uses demonstratives: ten (this, masc.), ta (this, fem.), to (this, neut.). These decline for case, gender, and number.

Demonstrative Pronouns (Nominative)

MasculineFeminineNeuter
thistentato
thattamtentamtatamto
these (masc.)ci / tetete
thosetamci / tamtetamtetamte

Examples

Ten dom jest duży.

This house is big.

ten + masc. noun

Ta kobieta jest miła.

This woman is nice.

ta + fem. noun

To dziecko jest małe.

This child is small.

to + neut. noun

Tamten samochód jest mój.

That car is mine.

tamten for 'that' (distant)

3Word Order for Definiteness

Polish uses word order to signal definiteness. New or indefinite information typically comes at the end of the sentence, while known or definite information comes first. This is called information structure.

Word Order and Meaning

PolishEmphasisEnglish
Książka jest na stole.the book (known)The book is on the table.
Na stole jest książka.a book (new info)There's a book on the table.
Kot śpi.the cat (known)The cat is sleeping.
Śpi kot.a cat (new info)A cat is sleeping.

Examples

Pies jest w ogrodzie.

The dog is in the garden.

known subject first = definite

W ogrodzie jest pies.

There is a dog in the garden.

new info at end = indefinite

Maria przyszła.

Maria came.

subject first (expected)

Przyszła Maria.

Maria came. (unexpected)

subject last (surprising)

4Jeden as Indefinite Marker

Sometimes jeden (one) is used like an indefinite article to emphasize 'a certain' or 'one particular'. This is optional and adds slight emphasis. It declines for gender and case.

Jeden as 'a/one'

GenderNominativeExample
masculinejedenjeden mężczyzna
femininejednajedna kobieta
neuterjednojedno dziecko

Examples

Znam jednego człowieka.

I know a (certain) man.

jeden for emphasis

Mam jedną prośbę.

I have one request.

jedna emphasizes 'just one'

To tylko jedno pytanie.

It's just one question.

jedno for neuter

Pewien człowiek mi powiedział.

A certain man told me.

pewien = a certain (alternative)

Practice Exercises

3 exercises

1

How do you say 'I have a book' in Polish?

2

To emphasize 'THIS house', use: '___ dom jest duży.'

3

Which word order suggests 'A dog is in the garden' (new information)?

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