INDEFINITE
ARTICLE
A
/ AN
Use 'a'
with nouns starting with a consonant (letters that are not
vowels),
'an' with nouns starting with a vowel (a,e,i,o,u)
Examples:
A boy
An apple
A car
An orange
A house
An opera
NOTE:
An
before an h mute - an hour, an honour.
A before u and eu when they sound like 'you':
a european, a university, a unit
The indefinite
article is used:
- to refer
to something for the first time:
An elephant
and a mouse fell in love.
Would you like a drink?
I've finally got a good job.
- to refer
to a particular member of a group or class
Examples:
- with
names of jobs:
John is a doctor.
Mary is training to be an
engineer.
He wants to be a dancer.
- with nationalities
and religions:
John is an
Englishman.
Kate is a Catholic.
- with
musical instruments:
Sherlock Holmes was playing a
violin when the visitor arrived.
(BUT
to describe the activity we say "He plays the violin.")
- with
names of days:
I was born on a Thursday
- to refer
to a kind of, or example of something:
the mouse had a
tiny nose
the elephant had a long
trunk
it was a very strange
car
- with
singular nouns, after the words 'what' and 'such':
What a shame!
She's such a beautiful
girl.
- meaning
'one', referring to a single object or person:
I'd like an orange
and two lemons please.
The burglar took a diamond
necklace and a
valuable painting.
Notice also
that we usually say a
hundred, a
thousand, a
million.
NOTE: that
we use 'one'
to add emphasis or to contrast with other numbers:
I don't know one person who likes eating elephant meat.
We've got six computers but only one printer.