"A, An, The" definite and indefinite articles in English



  • a = indefinite article (not a specific object, one of a number of the same objects) with consonants Eric has a dog. Gregory works in a factory.


  • an = indefinite article (not a specific object, one of a number of the same objects) with vowels (a,e,i,o,u) Can I have an apple? Donata is an English teacher.


  • the = definite article (a specific object that both the person speaking and the listener know) The car over there is fast. The teacher is very good, isn't he?


  • The first time you speak of something use "a or an", the next time you repeat that object use "the". I live in a house. The house is quite old and has two bedrooms. I ate in a Vietnamese restaurant. The restaurant was not very clean.


  • DO NOT use an article with countries, states, counties or provinces, lakes and mountains except when the country is a collection of states such as "The United States". My uncle lives in Cumbria near Lake Windermere. They live in Bristol.


  • Use an article with bodies of water, oceans and seas - I live on a small island in the Baltic Sea.


  • DO NOT use an article when you are speaking about things in general I like Indian tea. Simon likes reading books about linguistics.


  • DO NOT use an article when you are speaking about meals, places, and transport He has breakfast at home. I go to university. Magda comes to work by taxi.

Rate it

         
3.0

(Mouse over the stars to rate this resource and click here to add your comment.)

About this contribution

For learning English
Base language English
Tags  
Views848

Comments

mike

From China
Speaks Chinese (Mandarin)

The Latest Editors

Share this page

Share this page with friends on

Bookmark and Share