Oui
i think its when the next word begins with a vowel and the second letter is a constanant
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.
An is used before a vowel sound: An awful mess, but a usual thing
Use has a "long" U.
Before. (examples: A bunny, an orange)Use an before nouns that begin with a vowel sound.an apple / an orange / an orangutan / an envelope / an umbrellaUse a before nouns that begin with consonant sounds:a book / a mouse / a treeWhen you have a noun phrase eg adjective + nounthe same rules applya big orange / an empty glass / a small book / an open door
there is no restriction. Should I .... should he .....
you use (a) if the next word is not a vowel. you us (an) if the next word is a vowel.
i think its when the next word begins with a vowel and the second letter is a constanant
No - the prefix 'an' is used when the next word starts with a vowel.
No. "An" is used before words that begin with a vowel sound, but not all words that begin with vowels begin with vowel sounds. "Urinalysis" begins with a "y" sound, so you would use "a" rather than "an" before it as you would for any word that begins with a "y" sound: a urinalysis, a yawn. Examples of words that begin with "u" and also begin with a vowel sound are "udder", "ugly", and "unhappy".
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.
When the first letter of the next word starts with a vowel or the letter H. But of course there are exceptions.... a humble opinion.
An is used before a vowel sound: An awful mess, but a usual thing
The exception, which is not really an exception, is that words that start with a vowel but are *pronounced* with a consonant sound, use A, not AN. This is actually the rule: AN precedes words that begin with a vowel sound (not a vowel).
You have to use a or an in a sentence. When the next word starts with vowel, then an is used.
No. Use has a long vowel sound.
You would say A Hunter because you only use "an" when the next word starts with a vowel.