Yes, it is something you can put an article in front of i.e an epiphany
You put the article "an" in front of a word (instead of "a") when the word begins with a vowel sound, including some words that start with consonants (hour, honor).Words that begin with a vowel having a consonant sound such as "you" (euphemism, use) would still use the article "a" as when spoken.E.g. a uniform, a unicorn
foot
im not sure but i think you can put dom at the end of show
Paper :)
Yes, it is something you can put an article in front of i.e an epiphany
You put the article "an" in front of a word (instead of "a") when the word begins with a vowel sound, including some words that start with consonants (hour, honor).Words that begin with a vowel having a consonant sound such as "you" (euphemism, use) would still use the article "a" as when spoken.E.g. a uniform, a unicorn
Patiner is a verb. You don't put any article in front of it.
A word to put in front of 'on' to make a new word is up (upon).
the geography
The word "next" can be put in front of "step" to form the phrase "next step."
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 =)
The prefix that can be put in front of "care" is "dis-" to form the word "discare."
Watercress.
Sometimes, while writing, I put commas in front of the word 'while'.
When you put a word in front of a quote, it is called an attribution. This is used to indicate who is speaking or to provide context for the quote.
There is no conclusive proof to support either view.