Vamos a entender a la maestra.
In the case of a la maestra
, la
is a definite article (femenino singular->feminine singular) that you put before of a noun to indicate this noun is known to the speaker.
Vamos a entender al maestro.
al
is the contraction of a el
and el
is a definite article (masculino singular->masculine singular) that you put before of a noun to indicate this noun is known to the speaker. Unlike in English, where contractions are optional (will not
and won't
are grammatically interchangeable), the use of the contraction al
is obligatory in Spanish (as is the contraction del
, which means de el
), except when the el
is part of a proper noun:
- Vamos a El Salvador. NOT Vamos al Salvador.
Also be sure not to confuse el (it) with él (him/he). a él is never shortened:
There are five definite articles in Spanish:
- Masculine singular -> el
- Masculine plural -> los
- Feminine singular -> la
- Feminine plural -> las
- Neuter singular -> lo
Note that although in Spanish nouns are either masculine or feminine, it is possible to use the definite article lo
to construct a neuter form. For example:
Me gusta lo francés
I like French things
Feel free to edit if you see any errors in my attempt in English.
Hope this helps.