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when should I use "an"before a noun?
I often get confused when it is correct to use "an"before a noun. I hope somebody excelling at English can help me .
2011年6月7日 10:41
解答 · 5
2
Anything with a vowel at the start (a, e, i, o, u) EXCEPT when the sound is not that of a vowel.
Since words like "uniform" and "university" are pronounced with a "y" to start (yoo-ni-ver-sity, yoo-ni-form) you say 'a university' not 'an university'. Older guides will also tell you do put "an" before words starting with an H - "an hospital", "an historic day" but this is old-fashioned.
2011年6月7日
2
'An’ should be followed by a vowel (a,e,i,o,u), and 'a' should be followed by a consonant.
But this is not always true!
When using either of them, pay attention to pronunciation, and not on how the noun is written:
-The word hour has a soft ‘h’ which is weakly pronounced, and therefore we say ‘an hour’
-The word house has a hard ‘h’, so we pronounce 'a house'
Said otherwise, use 'an' before nouns that start with a vowel when pronouncing them, and 'a' before everything else.
2011年6月7日
2
An is used before a noun starting with a vowel ie: an apple, an egg, an igloo, an orange, an umbrella. Any noun basically starting with a, e, i, o or u, simple huh! :)
2011年6月7日
1
The rule is "an" comes before a vowel SOUND. It's a spoken rule rather than a written rule.
2011年6月7日
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