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Hi all! I've been giving English conversation lessons to a theology professor for about a year now. He's getting on in the years - a couple years from retirement - and his primary goal has been just to get his spoken English going a little
Teaching English (TEFL)
by
mikesusangray
1 yr 103 days ago
Conversations, Grammar, Pronunciation, Vocabulary, Articles, Universities, Idioms, Tenses, Present Tenses, Word Order, Prepositions, Present Simple, Definite Articles, Indefinite Articles
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Thanks for your input!
I still have a dilemma. Look at the following article which comes from Purdue University's on line writing lab.
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/esl/eslart.html
Note also that in English, the indefinite
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Just passing by, pardon me for sticking my nose in, but...
We say 'a history' but 'an historical'.
Some people do. I'm not sure when it became trendy but I wish people
would cut it out. I find it painful to hear. "An historical
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Guest wrote: Use "a" if the next word begins with a consonant, and "an" if the next word begins with a vowel. A tiger, an angel, a book, etc. A historical character.
This is not completely correct.
The indefinite article a is used when the
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The short answer, VC, is that they don't necessarily become countable-- it is often the speaker's option/conception that makes the choice.
1. (you have no '2')
In the countable case, can "an education" be any education such as primary
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Hi,
According to the "Longman Student Grammar" abstract nouns (such as education, kindness) can have countable and uncountable.
(e.g.)
1. What's your highest level of education? => uncountable
Although she was a girl she wanted an
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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 221 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 242 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 Tyro,
Here are some rules that I adapted from this page: An, The" definite and indefinite articles in English - Beginning Guide to indefinite articles . There is also a great fill-in-the-gaps exercise on the page, which shoud help you get to
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Hi FishWish
The grammar rule for indefinite articles usage is:
We use A before a consonant-sound.
We use AN before a vowel-sound.
The difference depends on the sound of the vowels and consonants, not the spelling!
honest begins with an
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