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Grammar

The 3 (general vs. specific — children / the children)

When to drop 'the' for general statements and when to keep it for specific things

General Statements: No “the”

When you talk about something in a general sense — all dogs, all music, all people — do not use the.

  • Meetings take up too much time. (meetings in general)
  • Software engineers are in high demand right now.
  • I enjoy classical music.
  • My favourite subject at school was economics.

This also applies with most. Say most + noun, not the most + noun:

  • Most employees prefer flexible working hours. (not The most employees)
  • Most clients pay within thirty days.

Specific Things: Use “the”

When you mean particular people or things — not all of them, just a known group — use the.

Compare:

General (no “the”)Specific (with “the”)
Contracts should be reviewed carefully.Have you signed the contracts on your desk?
I like working with data.Can you send me the data from last quarter?
Coffee keeps me awake.*The coffee in the break room is terrible.*
New hires need proper onboarding.*The new hires who started on Monday seem motivated.*

The key test: could the listener point to the exact items you mean? If yes, use the.

The Grey Area

Sometimes a noun is narrowed down by extra detail but still describes a general category, not a specific set. In that case, you still leave out the.

  • I like working with people who are honest. (not all people, but “honest people” is still a general type — you don’t mean a specific group)
  • Do you prefer strong black coffee? (a type of coffee, not one particular cup)

Compare that with truly specific references:

  • I like the people I work with. (= a specific group — my colleagues)
  • *The coffee we ordered for the conference was too weak.* (= a specific batch of coffee)

The difference: a general description of a type vs. a group you and the listener can both identify.

How This Works in Practice

Here is a quick summary of the pattern:

SituationExampleWhy
Talking about a categoryDeadlines create pressure.General — all deadlines
Talking about known items*The deadlines for this project are tight.*Specific — these deadlines
Using “most”Most managers attend the quarterly review.General — no “the” before “most”
Adding a general qualifierI respect people who keep their word.Still general — a type of person
Pointing to a known group*The people in accounting flagged an error.*Specific — that particular group

Quick Self-Check

Question 1

_____ are usually sent by email these days.

Select your answer:

Question 2

_____ we received last week contained several errors.

Select your answer:

Question 3

_____ applicants have at least three years of experience.

Select your answer:

Question 4

I enjoy working with people who share ideas openly. But _____ on my current team are quite reserved.

Select your answer:

Question 5

_____ is essential in any management role.

Select your answer:

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