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
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.
Certainly !... The preparation was complete.
The masculine plural definite article 'gli' shows that you mean 'the hobbies' when your topic is 'gli hobby' in Italian. It's pronounced 'lyee'. The masculine plural indefinite article 'degli' shows that you mean 'some hobbies' when your topic is 'degli hobby'. It's pronounced 'DEH-lyee'.
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.
Not in English...in French, for example, you would, but not in English.
"École" in French is feminine, so the correct article to use before it would be "la" (feminine article) to say "l'école."
You use the article a when followed by a word that starts with a consonant. You use an as an article followed by a word which starts with a vowel.1) Your mother is a funny woman.2) An octopus is an interesting animal.
The article before a vowel is "an". For example, "an apple" or "an umbrella".