Articles
Articles
Articles
A and an are also used when talking about your profession.
I am an English teacher.
I am a builder.
You use A when the noun you are referring to begins with a consonant: a house, a building, a car.
You use An when the noun you are referring to begins with a vowel (a, e, i, o, u).
Pronunciation changes this rule. It’s the sound that matters, not the spelling.
If the next word begins with a consonant sound when we say it, for example, "university" then we use a. If
the next word begins with a vowel sound when we say it, for example "hour" then we use an.
We say "university" with a "y" sound at the beginning as though it were spelt " you niversity". - So, "a
university" IS correct.
We say "hour" with a silent h as though it were spelt "our". - So, "an hour" IS correct.
the Nile
the Pacific
the English channel
We also use The before certain nouns when we know there is only one of a particular thing.
the Rain
the sun
the wind
the world
the earth
the White House
However if you want to describe a particular instance of these you should use a/an.
Without an article
Italy, Mexico, Bolivia, England
The
the UK (United Kingdom), the USA (United States of America), the Irish Republic
Multiple areas
the Netherlands, the Philippines , the British Isles