the geography
An or the
Flow. If you can put the definite article before a word and it makes sense in a sentence, the word can usually be used as a noun.
Usually, we just put the article 'a' before a noun, to show that there is just one, BUT if a word begins with a vowel (either a, e, i, o, or u) we put the article 'an' in front of it, EXCEPT if it doesn't sound like it begins with a vowel, such as we would not put- 'an unicorn', as unicorn sounds like it begins with a 'y', so we saw 'a unicorn'. I hope I explained this right =)
Either a or the is correct, depending on the context: I left the book at home. Marta set her bag down and took out a book to read.
"an" always put "an" before a word starting with a vowel.
Yes, it is something you can put an article in front of i.e an epiphany
"The" is an article, therefor you place it before a noun, ex: the cow was hungry.
no
The article "an" is used before words that begin with vowel sounds to maintain smooth pronunciation. This is to avoid the harsh sound that would occur if a word beginning with a vowel sound were to follow "a."
The indefinite article is "an," a form of "one." Its n is dropped before a consonant sound, but preserved before a vowel sound.
The letter "I" makes the word "I" and can be put before "attend" to make the sentence "I attend".
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