The Articles
The three
articles — a, an, the — are a kind of adjective. The is called the
definite article because it usually precedes a specific or previously mentioned
noun; a and an are called
indefinite articles because they are used to refer to something in a less
specific manner (an unspecified count noun). These words are also listed among
the noun markers or determiners because they are almost invariably followed by
a noun (or something else acting as a noun)
The is used with specific nouns. The is required when
the noun it refers to represents something that is one of a kind:
The moon circles the earth.
The is required when the noun it refers to represents
something in the abstract:
The United States has encouraged the use of the
private automobile as opposed to the use of public transit.
The is required when the noun it refers to represents something named
earlier in the text.
We use a
before singular count-nouns that begin with consonants (a cow, a barn, a
sheep); we use an before singular count-nouns that begin with
vowels or vowel-like sounds (an apple, an urban blight, an open door). Words
that begin with an h sound often require an a (as in a
horse, a history book, a hotel), but if an h-word begins with an
actual vowel sound, use an an (as in an hour, an honor).
We would say a useful device and a union matter
because the u of those words actually sounds like yoo (as
opposed, say, to the u of an ugly incident). The same is
true of a European and a Euro (because of that
consonantal "Yoo" sound). We would say a once-in-a-lifetime
experience or a one-time hero because the words once and one
begin with a w sound (as if they were spelled wuntz and won).
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