De and Het Words
De- en Het-woorden
De and Het Words in Dutch
Every Dutch noun comes with a definite article: either de or het. This is similar to how French has le/la or German has der/die/das, except Dutch has simplified things down to just two articles. The catch? There is no single rule that tells you which article a noun takes. You need to learn the article together with each new word.
About 75% of Dutch nouns are de-words (common gender), and 25% are het-words (neuter gender). While this means you will be right most of the time if you guess de, there are several useful patterns that can help you predict which article to use. Knowing whether a noun is a de-word or a het-word matters because it affects adjective endings, demonstratives, relative pronouns, and more.
Do not be discouraged if you mix them up — even advanced learners occasionally stumble, and native speakers will always understand you. But building good habits from the start will save you effort later.
Formation / How It Works
The Two Articles
| Article | Gender | Example | English |
|---|---|---|---|
| de | Common (masculine/feminine) | de man, de vrouw, de tafel | the man, the woman, the table |
| het | Neuter | het kind, het huis, het boek | the child, the house, the book |
Patterns for De-words
| Pattern | Examples |
|---|---|
| People with natural gender | de man, de vrouw, de leraar, de dokter |
| Most agent nouns (-er, -eur, -aar) | de bakker, de chauffeur, de eigenaar |
| Nouns ending in -ing | de woning, de vergadering, de oefening |
| Nouns ending in -heid, -teit | de vrijheid, de universiteit |
| Nouns ending in -ie | de politie, de informatie |
| Nouns ending in -ij | de bakkerij, de slagerij |
| Nouns ending in -schap | de wetenschap, de vriendschap |
| Nouns ending in -te, -de | de hoogte, de liefde |
| Most plural nouns | de boeken, de huizen, de kinderen |
Patterns for Het-words
| Pattern | Examples |
|---|---|
| Diminutives (-je, -tje, -pje, -etje) | het huisje, het kopje, het bloempje |
| Infinitives used as nouns | het eten, het lopen, het zwemmen |
| Words starting with ge-, be-, ver-, ont- (many) | het geluk, het begin, het verschil, het ontbijt |
| Words ending in -um | het museum, het centrum |
| Words ending in -ment | het moment, het appartement |
| Words ending in -sel | het voedsel, het raadsel |
| Languages and sports | het Nederlands, het voetbal |
| Metals and compass points | het goud, het noorden |
Important: Plurals Always Take "De"
Regardless of whether a noun is a de-word or a het-word in the singular, all plural nouns use de:
- het boek → de boeken
- het kind → de kinderen
- de tafel → de tafels
Examples in Context
| Dutch | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| De kat zit op de stoel. | The cat sits on the chair. | Both kat and stoel are de-words |
| Het boek ligt op de tafel. | The book is on the table. | Boek is a het-word, tafel is a de-word |
| Waar is het station? | Where is the station? | Station is a het-word |
| De kinderen spelen buiten. | The children play outside. | Plural always takes de |
| Ik woon in het centrum. | I live in the center. | Ending -um → het-word |
| Het meisje is blij. | The girl is happy. | Diminutive → het-word |
| De school is groot. | The school is large. | School is a de-word |
| Het ontbijt is klaar. | Breakfast is ready. | Prefix ont- → het-word |
| De vrijheid is belangrijk. | Freedom is important. | Ending -heid → de-word |
| Het eten was lekker. | The food was delicious. | Infinitive as noun → het-word |
| Waar is de sleutel? | Where is the key? | Sleutel is a de-word |
| Het weer is mooi vandaag. | The weather is nice today. | Weer is a het-word |
Common Mistakes
| Wrong | Right | Why |
|---|---|---|
| de meisje | het meisje | Meisje is a diminutive (-je), so it takes het even though it refers to a girl. |
| het boeken | de boeken | All plurals take de, regardless of the singular article. |
| de water | het water | Water is a het-word. No pattern helps here — just memorize it. |
| het universiteit | de universiteit | Nouns ending in -teit are de-words. |
| het woning | de woning | Nouns ending in -ing are always de-words. |
Practice Tips
Always learn the article with the noun. Never memorize huis alone — memorize het huis. Write vocabulary lists with the article included. Many learners color-code: one color for de-words, another for het-words.
Start with the patterns. When you encounter a new word, check if it matches a pattern (diminutive? ends in -ing? starts with ge-?). If yes, you can predict the article. If no pattern fits, look it up and memorize it.
When in doubt, guess de. Since roughly 75% of nouns are de-words, guessing de gives you the best odds. This is not a long-term strategy, but it helps when you are stuck mid-conversation.
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