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Using “a” and “an” Before Words
Raphael asks: When should I use “a” and when should I use “an” before the different words? For example, should I say “a hour” or “an hour?” I stumble over this everytime and dont’t know if I’m getting it right, as
ESL, Learn Basic English Vocabulary
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anonymous
211 days ago
Pronunciation, Vowels, Spelling, Abbreviations, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Writing, Usages, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Consonants
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These should cover 99% of the uses: a & an : before noun phrases containing an unspecified or newly-mentioned noun; use a before a word beginning with a consonant sound and use an before a word beginning with a vowel sound. the : before noun
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How does university have a consonant sound at the beginning? U is a vowel and it makes a vowel sound when spoken. Surely it would be better to say there is no real rule that denotres the usage of these a's and an's.
University
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How does university have a consonant sound at the beginning? U is a vowel and it makes a vowel sound when spoken. Surely it would be better to say there is no real rule that denotres the usage of these a's and an's.
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"He is an European" is not the right usage. because european does not start with a vowel sound. the sound u (a,e,i,o,u) is not a vowel sound. it is a consonant sometimes people say semi vowel.
rgvijay
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india
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among and amongst are both use when talking about anything refering to more then 2...now the confusing thing is when to use among and amongst :- lemme tell u : among is use when the word that comes next is starting with a consonant letter..eg:
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As per phonetics theory, I've been told one should use the indefinite article "a" before words beginning with a consonant and "an" before words beginning with a vowel or a diphthong. And the sound "y" ( or / j /
uk.culture.language.english
by
paul
1 yr 275 days ago
Vowels, Consonants, Articles, Universities, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Usages, Students, Schools, Indefinite, Diphthongs
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Maybe I haven't lived enough places. But it does seem that plenty of cities have pub's named The Town Crier, but very few towns do. Leaving the apocatastrophe aside, I find from a quick Google search that there are pubs of that name in the
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Hi all, I'm studying Betty Schrampfer Azar's book, Understanding and ... I don't understand the explanation she gave about the reason. No reason. Just usage. Any time you have a written s after a t it's pronounced as an s. meats,
misc.education.language.english
by
einde o'callaghan
4 yr 86 days ago
Regards, American English, Vowels, British English, Consonants, Plurals, Relationships, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Marriage, Usages, American, Languages
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uk.culture.language.english
by
lars eighner
4 yr 234 days ago
Vowels, Consonants, Dialects, United States, Countries, Usages, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Animals, Adjectives, Languages
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