'A young man" would be the correct form. The article "a" is used in front of a noun beginning with a consonant (with a few exceptions).
An young man.
A young man
The correct spelling is "guarantee".
If you are referring to "The Cay", young bahss means young boy, or young man. Its in dialect.
the young guy is acting like a geezer
Young man.
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "juvenile" (immature, young).
The correct punctuation is: "You are old, Grandpa William," the young man said.
Puddles cannot die. The correct description would be "A young, dead man was found by a big puddle of water. ha ha
It is all down to personal opinion not one answer is correct
While the 2 young ladies had a conversation, a man stood listening in.
No.The word "an" should be used in lieu of "a" when the following word begins with a vowel or an H. While it is possible for the letter Y to serve as a vowel at times, in this particular case, the word young follows. The letter Y is used as a consonant in the word "young" and so "many an young man" would be incorrect and "many a young man" is the correct usage.More specifically, use 'an' if the word immediately following begins with a vowel SOUND. What the actual letter is is irrelevant, it is the sound that matters. Thus, it's 'a unicorn', as the 'u' is a consonant sound, while 'an umbrella' is correct, as the 'u' there is a vowel sound. Similarly, 'an hour' and 'a history book' are the correct usages.
'young man' is in Dutch 'jonge man'
young man
That is the correct spelling of "mammal" (a warm-blooded vertebrate).
A useful young man
he wasnt a angry young man.
Huh Young-man was born in 1947.
A Young Man Is Gone was created in 1963.