no, you say 'you bought an apple computer'
The Apple Macintosh is Siri's favourite computer
i would have to say apple
The former ie "I bought a scanner off you" or "I bought a scanner from you"
you would buy two pairs of pants!
"An apple" is correct. use "an" before a word beginning with a vowel. Also before a word beginning with a silent "h," as in "an honor."
Either could be correct, depending on the sentence. "She bought an ice cream" means that she bought one ice cream and that the kind is not important. "She bought the ice cream" could be an answer to a question or making a formal statement about who bought it. You could also say, "She bought ice cream."
the apple II was the 1st computer to use a mouse so I'll say that.
Because it depends whether it is a vowel or a consonant. For example 'a apple' is wrong. 'an apple' is correct. 'a book' is correct. 'an book' is wrong. The word that begins with a vowel like orange, apple, elephant, then we will say an before it but with a consonant like book, computer, table we say a before it. Just like that xmas tree begins with a consonant, therefore we say 'a' before it, not 'an.' Actually, it is whether it is a vowel *sound* rather than an actual vowel, but otherwise, dead on. For instance, you would say "an hour" but "a hippo" ... it depends on whether the words starts would a vowel sound.
Both are correct, but it depends on whether this phrase is the subject of the sentence or the object: grandmother and I went to the park. They bought lunch for grandmother and me.
You should be able to sync the information into the new computer but if not I would call apple and see what they say.
a historical building. a is for consonants an is for vowels. an apple. an elephant. a box. a sheep
no, it is illegal because its not a apple product and if somebody wanted to buy say a HP computer they'd go to the website and find its not there. It would just confuse you.