"An" is a singular article. "Airlines" is plural. You can't say "An airlines is..." or "An airlines are...."
You can say "An airline" (singular): "Air Canada is an airline that is used to dealing with icy runways."
You can also say "an airline's"--that is, singular possessive: "You can go to an airline's website to get schedule information."
british do not use any article before hospital. but americons sometimes use article "the" before hospital.
You use the article "a" before a word that starts with a consonant, and you use the article "an" before a word that starts with a vowel. you use an a if there is a vowl after the a. if there is not a vowl after a then it just stays a
why we use an before hotel
'a utilitarian outlook' is correct. Use 'an' before a vowel sound, and 'a' before a consonant sound. In this case, the 'u' in 'utilitarian' sounds like a consonant 'y' at the beginning of the word, so 'a' is the appropriate article.
I've never seen that kind of article before in a newspaper.
The article "a" is used before the word "useful" to indicate that it is a singular noun. In English grammar, "a" is an indefinite article used before singular nouns that begin with a consonant sound.
Although unicorn starts with a vowel, we say and write a unicorn because the long U in a unicorn sounds like the Y in a yam or a yellow bus.
The correct usage is "a boy." The article "a" is used before words that begin with a consonant sound, while "an" is used before words that begin with a vowel sound. Since "boy" begins with a consonant sound (the "b" sound), "a" is the appropriate article to use.
Certainly !... The preparation was complete.
Is this appropriate ever to use at before the word priority
business article with, appropriate level of readability, use of jorgon, slang and metaphors, common errors in English
You don't. In proper grammar, you use "a" before Europe.The indefinite article an is shortened to a before words beginning with a consonant sound. European begins with a consonant sound called the y-glide, and so we say a European.