Almost always. The words "a" and "an" are indefinite articles, meaning they apply to a nonspecific object or person. The words "the", "this", and "that" are definite articles, indicating a certain or specific individual thing or person within a group or setting.
Article before the word useful
No. The word "the" is an article, and is used with nouns.
The article you are asking about is the definite article, also known as the word "the".
Bibliography is the word.
No. The word "a" is an article. It is used before nouns like an adjective.
No. The word "a" is an article (a determiner used like an adjective).
it is a word used in an article called navy dolphin
The word "the" is a definite article, used like an adjective.
It depends on the foreign word.
There is no root word for 'a'. 'a' is the indefinite article. NB 'an' is also the indefinite article, but used only for nouns beginning with ;a,e,i,o,u, and h. 'The' is the definitearticle.
It is a word, an article to be exact. It is also a letter, you can only use it alone as a word.
'The' is an adjective, in fact it is a particular type of adjective known as an article, and it is a 'definite article' at that.