10/01/2010

A or An

As you already know, we use a/an  with singular, general nouns, when we’re not talking about a specific thing. Of course, there might be an adjective befote the noun.

She's a student. She's a Spanish student.
(the noun is singular and general, the adjective is irrelevant, so we use a before it)

We use a or an depending on the sound that the adjective or noun begins with.
We use a before adjetives / nouns that begin with a consonant sound:
a student, a Spanish actress
a house, a horrible house

We use a before adjetives / nouns that begin with a vowel sound:
an actress, an American student
an uncle, an ugly uncle

CAREFUL:
There are a few words that start with the a silent H so the beginning sound comes from the first vowel(s). For example:
hour, honest
an hour / an honest person

There are also some words that start with the vowel U but begin with a consonant Y sound (like the word you). For example:
university, European
a university / a European university

Listen to the audio below.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Adam,

Bravo por el blog !!!