The 4: the giraffe / the old | Unit 76 | PrepMyEnglish
PrepMyEnglish
Accueil English Grammar Unit 76 — the 4 (the giraffe / the old / the French)
Unit 76 · Grammar Lesson

The 4 — the giraffe / the telephone / the old etc.
Types, Adjective Groups & Nationalities — Complete Guide

Master three special uses of the: referring to a type of thing (the giraffe), talking about groups with the + adjective (the old, the rich), and using the + nationality (the French, the Chinese)

B1 – B2 3 Rules · 4 Exercises · PDF

Unit 76 covers three special uses of the that go beyond the basic specific/general distinction. We use the + singular noun to refer to a whole type or class of thing (The giraffe is the tallest animal). We use the + adjective to talk about groups of people (the poor, the elderly). And we use the + nationality adjective to refer to the people of a country (the French, the Chinese).

A

The Giraffe / The Telephone — Referring to a Type

We use the + singular noun to talk about a type of animal, machine, invention, or currency — not one specific example. This is also used for musical instruments.

Type/class:  The giraffe is the tallest of all animals.  (= giraffes as a type)
Invention:  When was the camera invented?
Currency:  The dollar is the currency of the United States.
Instruments:  Can you play the guitar?  ·  The piano is my favourite instrument.
📌
Compare a and the: I'd like to have a piano. (= one piano, any piano) vs I can't play the piano. (= the instrument as a type). Also: man (without the) = the human race: What do you know about the origins of man?
The bicycle is an excellent means of transport.
→ the bicycle as a type/invention — not one specific bicycle
We saw a giraffe at the zoo. / The giraffe is my favourite animal.
→ a giraffe = one specific giraffe · the giraffe = giraffes as a type
The euro is the currency of most EU countries.
→ the euro as a currency type

B

The Old, The Rich — The + Adjective (Groups of People)

We use the + adjective (without a noun) to talk about a group of people. These expressions are always plural. For one person, we need a noun.

Group:  The old = old people  ·  The rich = rich people  ·  The homeless = homeless people
Plural:  Do you think the rich should pay higher taxes?
One person:  a rich man (not a rich)  ·  a homeless person (not a homeless)
the oldthe elderlythe richthe poorthe homelessthe unemployedthe sickthe injuredthe young
⚠️
Common error: We say the old (not the olds), the poor (not the poors). These adjectives never take a plural -s. And for one person: a sick man, an injured woman — never a sick or an injured alone.

C

The French, The Chinese — Nationalities with the

We use the + nationality adjective to refer to the people of a country. This applies to adjectives ending in -ch, -sh, -ese, -ss. For other nationalities, the plural ends in -s (usually without the).

-ch / -sh endings (always plural):
the French · the Dutch · the British · the English · the Spanish

-ese / -ss endings (plural, or singular with a/an):
the Chinese · the Portuguese · the Swiss  →  a Chinese, a Swiss (singular OK)

Other nationalities → plural with -s (no the):
an Italian → Italians · a Mexican → Mexicans · a Thai → Thais
Italians / Mexicans / Thais are very friendly.

With the (no singular possible)

The French are famous for their food.
The Spanish often eat late in the evening.
The British are known for queuing.
→ no "a French" or "an English" alone

Without the (plural -s)

Italians love pasta.
Mexicans celebrate Día de los Muertos.
I met a French woman / an English guy.
→ adjective + people always works: French people, Italian people
💡
In all cases you can use adjective + people: French people, Chinese people, Mexican people are very friendly. This form always works and avoids any confusion.

The 4 — Exercises with Answers

Put each rule into practice — check your answers instantly

76.1

Answer the questions — choose from the box. Don't forget the.

Use the + noun (type/class). Write the full answer including the.

ANIMALStiger · rabbit · giraffe · elephant · cheetah · kangaroo
BIRDSeagle · swan · parrot · penguin · owl · pigeon
INVENTIONStelephone · telescope · helicopter · wheel · laser · typewriter
CURRENCIESdollar · euro · rouble · peso · rupee · yen
1a
1b
1c
2a
2b
2c
3a
3b
3c
4a
4b
Answers: 1a the giraffe · 1b the cheetah · 1c the kangaroo · 2a the swan · 2b the penguin · 2c the owl · 3a the wheel · 3b the laser · 3c the telescope · 4a the rupee · 4b the dollar
76.2

Put in the or a

Type only the article needed (the / a / an).

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
Answers: 1. the · 2. a · 3. the · 4. a · 5. the · 6. the · 7. a · 8. The · 9. the · 10. a
76.3

Complete using the + adjective

Choose from the box below. Use the + adjective group.

Choose from:   elderly  ·  injured  ·  rich  ·  sick  ·  unemployed  ·  young
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Answers: 1. The young · 2. the sick · 3. the unemployed · 4. the injured · 5. the elderly · 6. the rich
76.4

What do you call the people of these countries?

Fill in both columns: one person (a/an …) and the people in general.

CountryOne person (a/an …)The people in general
Canadaa CanadianCanadians
Germany
France
Russia
Japan
Brazil
England
Answers: Germany: a German / Germans · France: a French person / the French · Russia: a Russian / Russians · Japan: a Japanese person / the Japanese · Brazil: a Brazilian / Brazilians · England: an English person / the English

Frequently Asked Questions — The 4

What is the difference between "a piano" and "the piano"?

A piano refers to one specific piano (any piano). The piano refers to the instrument as a type or category. I'd like to have a piano in my flat. (= one piano, the object). She plays the piano beautifully. (= the piano as an instrument type).

Can I say "the olds" or "the poors"?

No. When using the + adjective for groups, the adjective never takes a plural -s. Say the old, the poor, the young. Also remember these expressions are already plural — never say a old or a poor alone. For one person: an old man, a poor woman.

Can I say "a French" to refer to one French person?

No. For nationalities ending in -ch, -sh (French, English, Spanish, Dutch, British), you cannot use the word alone as a singular noun. Say a French person, a French woman, or a Frenchman. The form the French is always plural (= all French people).

What about "the Chinese" — is that singular or plural?

Nationalities ending in -ese (Chinese, Japanese, Portuguese) can be used as both singular and plural. The Chinese = the Chinese people (plural). A Chinese = one Chinese person (singular) — this is acceptable, though a Chinese person is more natural. The same applies to a Swiss, a Portuguese.

When talking about "man" (the human race), do I use "the"?

No. When man means the human race in general, we use it without the: What do you know about the origins of man? However, in modern usage human beings or humans is often preferred.

To use reCAPTCHA, you need to add the API Key and complete the setup process in Dashboard > Elementor > Settings > Integrations > reCAPTCHA.