Sasha
Professional Teacher
Articles (on a coast or on the caost) Hi! "I live in (4) a relatively small town on (5) a / the coast, with a sizeable tourist influx in the summer months." To choose the correct answer wasn't very difficult for me as I've heard tens of times (not hundreds) people say "on the coast." That said, I still don't understand the reason for using "the". Let's say there several coasts (west and east costs) and I am talking about one coast. So, I could say "I live on a coast, with a sizeable tourist influx in the summer months." Tell me please where I am wrong (1). Why can't I say "a cost" in this sentence? (2) Is there a case where I can say "on a coast" or I live "on a cost?" (3) Thank you!
Nov 16, 2018 11:17 AM
Answers · 10
3
For me, the use of THE or A here is about specificity and whether it is a singularity. A coast would indicate a general idea, much like saying "I live on a hill". So you have some non specific idea about where I live and that could be fine. "Yeah me too, we live on a hill and we get great views too!" But if I were to say "I live on the hill." (as a first reference, rather a specification like "I live on the second biggest hill in the area") what would you think? Well, that there is ONE hill in the area. It is THE hill. Now a feature about coasts is that there is [generally] only one in the area, so it is always going to be referred to as 'the'. If you live in some less typical geographical feature, I bet local people say, "the north coast" etc. Just for another example. We could say "I live on a lake" because there could be many. Or ONCE WE KNOW in what country a person lives in, then they could say "I live near THE capital." EDIT : using "a coast" Google search throws up... it is also possible to have very swift tidal currents on a coast where the tidal range is But I have to admit using "a coast" in a non-technical way is much less common.
November 16, 2018
2
"The coast" would normally be understood as a category (not the mountains, not the city) or as the nearest coast. It's similar to the airport, the bank, the hospital. Grammar in Use has several units on articles. "the bank, the airport, the library, the coast, the beach" are covered.
November 16, 2018
1
'the coast' means at the sea/ocean, not inland - it's general; not a specific place. :)
November 16, 2018
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November 16, 2018
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