Luxembourgish articles
From UniLang Wiki
The Luxembourgish articles are a little different from
their German counterparts,
as the following tables show.
Please not that an N at the end only occurs when preceding D, H, N, T, Z, a vowel or a punctuation mark.
d is pronounced like a T, even when preceding a vowel.
Contents |
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Unstressed Definite Articles (cf. multilingual articles (definite))
| (m) | (f) | (n) | Pl. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nom. | de(n) | d' | d' | d' |
| Dat. | dem | der | dem | de(n) |
| Akk. | de(n) | d' | d' | d' |
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Stressed Definite Articles (cf. multilingual articles (definite))
| (m) | (f) | (n) | Pl. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nom. | dee(n) | déi | daat | déi |
| Dat. | deem | där | deem | dee(n) |
| Akk. | dee(n) | déi | daat | déi |
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Indefinite Articles (cf. multilingual articles (indefinite))
| (m) | (f) | (n) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nom. | e(n) | eng | e(n) |
| Dat. | engem | enger | engem |
| Akk. | e(n) | eng | e(n) |
I'm afraid I can't give a guarantee for the correctness of these lists...
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Links
>> Luxembourgish >> Luxembourgish grammar
