Italian Articles: Il, Lo, La, I, Gli, Le Explained
June 5, 2026 • ItalianNow • 7 minute read
Table of Contents
- Seven words, two questions
- The feminine lane is the easy one
- The masculine lane: il, lo, and l’
- il — the default
- lo — the special set
- l’ — before a vowel
- Plurals are even simpler: i vs gli
- Why lo and gli exist at all
- Edge cases that trip people up
- When the adjective comes first
- Italian uses “the” where English drops it
- A peek at contractions
- Top mistakes to avoid
- Quick recap
English gets by with a single word: the book, the student, the houses. Italian makes you choose between seven, and that choice can feel like a wall when you’re starting out. Here’s the good news: almost nobody who struggles with Italian articles is struggling because the rules are hard. They’re struggling because someone handed them a seven-row table to cram instead of showing them the decision underneath it. There is a decision underneath it — two quick questions — and once you can ask them in order, the right article comes out every time.
Seven words, two questions
Forget the list for a second. Every Italian article is the answer to two questions asked in sequence.
Question 1 — what is the noun? Its gender and number put you in one of four lanes: masculine singular, feminine singular, masculine plural, feminine plural. This comes from the noun itself, learned with the noun. If that part is shaky, start with our Italian noun gender guide — article choice is the downstream payoff of knowing gender.
Question 2 — what sound does the next word start with? Not the meaning, just the sound: a vowel, a “special” cluster (s + consonant, z, gn, ps, pn, x, y, or i + vowel), or a plain consonant (everything else).
Answer both and read off the table:
| Lane | Vowel start | ”Special” start | Plain consonant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Masculine singular | l’ (l’amico) | lo (lo studente) | il (il libro) |
| Feminine singular | l’ (l’amica) | la (la stazione) | la (la casa) |
| Masculine plural | gli (gli amici) | gli (gli studenti) | i (i libri) |
| Feminine plural | le (le amiche) | le (le stazioni) | le (le case) |
The feminine lane is the easy one
Knock out half the system first. Feminine nouns never care about the special set. In the singular you use la before any consonant — la casa (the house), la stazione (the station), even la psicologia — and l’ before a vowel, where la elides: l’amica, l’estate, l’isola. In the plural there is exactly one form, le, and it never changes and never elides: le case, le amiche, le isole. That’s a whole gender handled in two sentences.
The masculine lane: il, lo, and l’
Masculine is where the famous lo lives, and it has three forms.
il — the default
Use il before a plain consonant. This is your everyday masculine “the”: il libro (the book), il cane (the dog), il mare (the sea), il padre (the father).
lo — the special set
Use lo when the masculine word starts with the special set: s + consonant, z, gn, ps, pn, x, y, or i + vowel. So lo studente (the student), lo specchio (the mirror), lo zio (the uncle), lo zaino (the backpack), lo psicologo (the psychologist), lo yogurt.
l’ — before a vowel
Before a vowel (including silent h, which Italian never pronounces), lo elides to l’: l’amico, l’ospedale, l’hotel.
| Italian | English |
|---|---|
| il libro | the book |
| lo studente | the student |
| lo zaino | the backpack |
| l'amico | the friend |
| lo specchio | the mirror |
Plurals are even simpler: i vs gli
The masculine plural has only two buckets, not three. Use i before a plain consonant — it’s just the plural of il: i libri, i cani, i ragazzi. Use gli for everything else: both vowels and the entire special set. So gli amici (the friends), gli studenti (the students), gli zii (the uncles), gli psicologi. The payoff is huge — the special-set list you learned for lo is the same list that triggers gli. Learn it once, use it twice.
Why lo and gli exist at all
This isn’t an arbitrary rule to memorize — it’s about being able to say the word. Try il studente out loud: your tongue has to stack “l-s-t” with no vowel to lean on. Giving the article its own vowel ending — lo studente — lets it glide. Every member of the special set is a cluster that would jam against a bare il, which is exactly why l’ exists too: before a vowel, lo amico and la amica would collide vowel-on-vowel, so Italian elides to l’amico, l’amica. Once you hear it this way, the wrong article sounds wrong, and you stop needing the chart.

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Edge cases that trip people up
A few things look like exceptions but follow the same two questions.
- Silent h counts as a vowel start: l’hotel, gli hotel.
- Foreign w- and y- words join the special set: lo whisky → gli whisky, lo yogurt → gli yogurt.
- uovo (egg) flips gender in the plural: masculine l’uovo, but feminine le uova. The article follows the noun, not the other way around.
- Acronyms go by their spoken sound: lo SPID (you say “esse-pi…”, an s-cluster), la FIAT (feminine company name).
When the adjective comes first
Italian lets adjectives sit before the noun, and when they do, the article matches the adjective’s first sound, not the noun’s. The article agrees with whatever it physically touches: lo stesso libro (the same book — stesso starts s + consonant, even though libro alone would take il), il vecchio amico (the old friend), gli altri studenti (the other students). Match the word you’re touching and you can’t go wrong.
Italian uses “the” where English drops it
A different failure mode: English speakers leave out articles Italian insists on. Italian puts a definite article on general and abstract nouns (Il tempo è denaro — “Time is money”), with piacere (Mi piace la pizza — “I like pizza”), on languages and countries (Studio l’italiano, L’Italia è bella), and — instead of “my” — on body parts: Mi lavo le mani (“I wash my hands”). When you generalize or talk about a whole category, keep the article.
A peek at contractions
When an article follows a, da, di, in, or su, the two fuse into one word: di + il = del, a + la = alla, in + i = nei, su + gli = sugli. You’ll see these constantly, so it helps to recognize the pattern early — but they’re a topic of their own, covered in our guide to Italian prepositions.
Top mistakes to avoid
The big ones, in order of how often they bite beginners: il studente (should be lo, special set); lo stazione (it’s feminine — la stazione); i amici (masculine plural before a vowel is gli); lo amico without eliding (it’s **l’**amico); and dropping the article on general nouns (Mi piace la pizza, not Mi piace pizza).
Quick recap
Two questions, every time: gender and number first, then the first sound of the next word. Feminine is la / l’ singular and always le plural. Masculine plain consonant is il / i; the special set is lo / gli; before a vowel it’s l’ / gli. Get the gender right and the sound right, and all seven words for “the” stop being a list and start being a reflex.
Want to keep the momentum going? Once articles feel automatic, point that same gender-and-agreement instinct at the rest of the grammar — our Italian numbers 1 to 100 guide is a friendly next step. You’ve got this.
Test what you've learned
5 quick questions to see what stuck.
-
Which article goes before studente (student)?
Studente starts with s + consonant, so the masculine article is lo — never il.
-
Feminine plural is always le, no matter the first letter.
Feminine ignores the special set entirely: le case, le amiche, le stazioni.
-
Match each word to the article it needs.
Tap a Italian word, then its English meaning to pair them.
Italian
English
-
Complete: ___ amici (the friends, masculine plural).
Masculine plural before a vowel is gli — and gli also covers the special set.
-
Why is it lo stesso libro and not il stesso libro?
The article matches the word it touches. Stesso comes first and starts s + consonant, so lo.
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