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Hi there, Some nouns in English, uncountable under normal circumstances, take the indefinite article when qualified by the adjective or adverbial phrase. How do I tell if a noun should take the indefinite article or not? Examples: When I got back
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Hi Muttley Unfortunately there are a myriad cases involving proper nouns with adjectival attributes and the indefinite article. You'll just have to learn them piecemeal. As you said in your first post, a/an is often used with a person's name: We
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Hi all I agree with the previous posters. Using the articles, especially the indefinite articles a and an ,
is perhaps the most difficult aspect of English grammar. Although the
grammar is mostly so simple that it couldn't be made much simpler
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Yes, your question is really interesting. I'm Brazilian and consequently a Portuguese speaker. In my native language, like in Italian, French, Spanish and German (some languages that I've been studying, other than English), people use the definite
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Hi Lyn,
Here is one of my posts from a previous thread on the topic of articles. It might help.
Posted: 03-30-2005 12:26 PM
The correct use of articles is acknowledged to be one of the most difficult points of English grammar, so
ESL Essay, Writing World
by
abbie1948
4 yr 217 days ago
Grammar, Numbers, Universities, Nouns, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Plurals, Articles, English Grammar, Vowels, Consonants, Indefinite Articles, Definite Articles, Translation
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An excellent reply, Jazz. I hope you won't mind if I expand on it a little.
The correct use of articles is acknowledged to be one of the most difficult points of English grammar, so don't be despondant Ali; mistakes don't usually matter too
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
abbie1948
4 yr 238 days ago
Articles, Grammar, Plurals, Nouns, Numbers, Universities, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Indefinite Articles, Definite Articles, English Grammar, Vowels, Consonants
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hi.
I have heard that I should say "he has good English" instead of "he has a good English." I don't understand why. Especially I have found the sentence "he has a tolerable English" in a English grammar book. The explanation of the use of the
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