The eternal Dutch struggle: is it 'de' or 'het'? There's no perfect rule — but there are patterns that get you right most of the time. Here's the complete guide.
Every Dutch noun takes either 'de' or 'het', and there's no fully reliable rule — but useful patterns cover most cases, and one habit fixes the rest.
The smaller, predictable group.
het meisje, het huisje, het kopje — always het.
het Nederlands, het Engels.
het goud, het zilver, het ijzer.
het noorden, het rood.
The bigger default group.
de man, de vrouw, de leraar.
de huizen, de kinderen — every plural is 'de'.
de appel, de wortel.
If in doubt, 'de' is statistically safer (75%).
Because there’s no perfect rule, the pros do one thing: always learn the article WITH the noun. Don’t memorise huis — memorise het huis. Don’t learn tafel — learn de tafel. Treat the article as part of the word and de/het stops being a guessing game. Good news: getting it wrong rarely blocks understanding, so don’t let it stop you speaking.
Dutch Daily teaches every noun with its article, so de/het becomes automatic. Daily lessons, real practice and instant feedback. Free to start.
Use 'het' for diminutives (-je), languages and most metals; use 'de' for people, all plurals, and most other nouns. About 75% of nouns are 'de'. There's no perfect rule, so learn each noun with its article.
It's 'het huis'. House is one of the common neuter nouns. Always learn it as 'het huis' so the article sticks.
It sounds slightly off to natives but rarely blocks understanding. Don't let de/het anxiety stop you speaking — fluency matters more than perfect articles.