Definite and indefinite articles. The definite article is the, as in the man The indefinite article is a or an, as in a manor an orange
I'm not sure there are five, but I know about three: "a," "an," and "the." The first two are called "indefinite" articles and the third is a "definite article." They are very confusing for non-English speakers-- in your question, for example, you asked about "which is in English language"-- you need a definite article there: "which is in the English language," since you are asking about a specific language. Let me try to explain:
The word "a" is used with a noun, and it means "one"-- a boy, a dog, a book, a house. It is used in the general sense, not referring to anything specific-- President and Mrs. Obama agreed to get a dog for their daughters. (We don't know which dog or which kind of dog.) I hope I can find a book about grammar. (I don't have a specific book in mind yet.) The word "an" is used like "a" but only when the next word begins with a vowel (a, e, i, o, u). It makes the sentence easier to pronounce. An egg, an ice cream, an American, an office. We saw an elephant at the circus. (Note that "an" must also be used if an adjective begins with a vowel: What an adorable baby! He is an excellent student.)
The word "the" is used with a specific noun, where you are not just referring to the thing in general, but to one particular noun: The college I visited was Boston University. (Not just any college-- that one specific college.) The governor hopes he will be re-elected. Maria studied the exam questions very carefully. (Not just questions in general, but the questions that were going to be on the exam.) The English language can be very confusing sometimes. (Not just any language-- one specific language.)
Article is a part of speech,
there are 3 article: a, an, the.
'a' is used as indefinite article and to denote as a singular thing, 'an' is for vowels and 'the' is used as definite article.
eg;
a man(any man 'not definite' ), a phone etc
an apple, an elephant etc
the man(talking about a particular man),the table etc
"A," "An," and "The" are the three articles that can be used in a sentence. "A" and "An" are indefinite articles, because they aren't describing someone or something specific (a dog could mean any dog, not a specific dog). "The" is a definite article because it describes something specific (the dog specifies a particular dog).
1. a, an , and the
2.magazines and newspapers
Only three in the whole English language!
Definite article: The
Indefinite articles: A, an
There may be several things included in an article, depending on the specific article. For example, there may be pictures included as well as bullet points and sources.
you, no, yes, ok
The spelling baggravation is not a word in the English language. The word is aggravation.Writing example sentences for class can be an aggravation.
You need to give the language the word is in.
What's more important than learning English is understanding why you need a language (not necessarily English).
Particle in the English language refers to the very tiny pieces like the chalk dust.
You need to give the language of the word you are asking about.
juste vous donner les articles: just give you the articles / items
The spelling baggravation is not a word in the English language. The word is aggravation.Writing example sentences for class can be an aggravation.
give me the answer
Give a detailed sketcu of the socio-cultural backround of the english language
"Give four characteristics of standard English?"
Could you give examples of figurative language in Maroo of the Winter Cave?
You need to give the language the word is in.
You will find some examples in the Wikipedia article on "Polish language".
hdrb
What's more important than learning English is understanding why you need a language (not necessarily English).
Basic modals (can, could, may, might, must, should, ought to, have to, have got to, had better).................. for the study and teaching of English as a second language.
You need to give the original language.