Unit Two
Unit Two
Unit Two
Introduction
There are two types of articles:the definite article (the) and the indefinite articles (a,
an). We usually use the indefinite article first to mention some person or thing. By
doing that, we don’t have to be clear about which particular person or thing we are
referring to. When we refer to the same person or thing again, we use the definite
article the to indicate the person or thing already mentioned.
There are times when we don’t have to use any one of the articles. Such non-use of
the article is given the name zero article, so we are actually using the zero article
when we are not using an article. Having a clear understanding of the different articles
enables us to choose the right articles to use.
1. The first sentence has to use ‘a letter’ not ‘the letter’ as no one, except the receiver
of the letter, knows which letter is referred to.
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2. The second sentence correctly uses ‘the letter’ because we know ‘the letter’ is
the same as ‘a letter’ mentioned in the first sentence.
However, we still don’t know which former classmate when it refers to ‘the former
classmate’. This is not correct, so the sentence should be rewritten correctly as follow:
I received a letter. The letter is from a former classmate.
We use the:
when there is only one such person, place or thing
the Pope, the President of the United States, the North Pole, the earth, the
sky before names of famous buildings, etc
the Eiffer Tower, the Great Wall of China
before a singular noun that refers to a whole class or group of people or things
the middle class, the homeless, the Canadians, the Hindus
before the special names of rivers, seas, oceans, mountain ranges, groups of islands.
the Nile, the Dead Sea, the Pacific Ocean, the
Himalayas before certain organizations, political parties, and
countries
the United Nations, the Republican Party, the USSR, and the
UAR before nouns such as places which we know of
We arrived early at the ferry terminal for our trip to the island.
We went to the cinema, after which we went to the stadium for a football
match. before abbreviations and initials of countries
the BBC (the British Broadcasting Corporation), the EEC (the European
Economic Community).
the UAR., the UK, the USA and the USSR
2. Indefinite Article: a, an
The indefinite articles a andan are used to introduce something that has not been
mentioned before. The indefinite articles are not used before a plural noun. We use a
before a word that begins with a consonant. We use an before a word that begins with
a vowel, or a word that begins with a consonant but has vowel sound (e.g. hour,
honour, etc)
We use a:
before the word one because one sounds as if it begins with a W (wun)
The indefinite article a also means one. We can use a orone as follow:
A Mr Brown called to ask when you are going to return the borrowed money.
I still remember it was on a December morning when I drove through the fog into
a tree.
We use an
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before a noun that is representative of a group, species, etc
3. Zero Article
We use the term zero article when no article is used. Articles are not always
necessary.
Zero article
Examples:
No article:
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before illnesses
A and anhave the same meaning and as they both mean one, they are used only
before a singular countable noun (a hat). We do not place either of them before a
plural noun or an uncountable noun.
The
Uncountable nouns
Proper nouns
The Brown family you have been waiting for has arrived.
Zero Article
When we use the zero article before the following types of nouns:
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Plural countable nouns
Proper nouns
1. When we use two or more adjectives to describe the same person or thing, we use
the article only before the first adjective.
He talked to a tall and blonde woman. (He talked to a (one) woman who was tall
and blonde.)
2. When we use two or more adjectives to refer to more than one person or thing,
we use the article before each adjective.
He talked to a tall and a blonde woman. (He talked to two women, one of whom was
tall and the other was a blonde.
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Articles before a countable noun.
All three articles a, an, the are used before a countable noun or before an adjective
followed by a noun. We commonly use them to begin a sentence. The nouns
used here are goal, priest, apple, friend, fireworks, and building.
The is the only article that is used before an uncountable noun. It can be anywhere
in a sentence except at the end. The uncountable nouns used here are butter, flesh,
sand, snow, cream, and skin.
A block of ice
A cube of sugar
A hunk of cheese
A layer of dirt
A piece of cloth
A pinch of salt
A slice of bread