ESL/Articles practice and pronunciation
Articles
- a, an, the
- articles indicate if something is general or "indefinite" (a/an) or specific or "definite" (the)
Indefinite article, a/ an
a, an
- a modifier that indicates a noun as something in general, a category
- or that makes a non-specific reference to something
- i.e. "a tree" indicates that the "tree" is one of any trees, or refers to a tree in general
- similar to
- "any tree"
- "some tree"
- "one tree" (as in one of many but not any particular tree)
- similar to
- indefinite articles always modify a singular noun
- 🗴
atrees - 🗸 a tree
- 🗴
a versus an
- a precedes a consonant or a hard sound
- a car
- a house (hard "h")
- a truck
- may include the vowel "U" if the "U-sound" of the word is pronounced like a "Y"
- a university
- a unit
- = a yoo-nit
- the reason is that to make the "an" + "yoo" sound ("an unit") requires making two distinct sounds with the mouth and tongue
- a yoo-nit
- whereas it is easier to say the "a" + "yoo" sound as it can be spoken as a single sound, "ayoo" ----
- an precedes a vowel or a soft consonant sound for "H" or "U"
- an hour (soft "h")
- an umbrella
"An" with letters and abbreviations
Some of the consonants of the alphabet have soft sounds
- so when speaking the consonant itself, if the pronunciation of the letter is soft, an is used
- You spell Michael with an M
- The word "letter" begins with an L
- Consonants that use an are
- F, H, L, M, N, R, S, X.
- all other consonants have a hard sound and so use a
- She spells her name Liza with a Z instead of an S
- Abbreviations are spoken out by their letters (FAQ, MRI, RFQ, RSVP, etc.), thus
- I need an MRI
- They want an RSVP
- similarly, words that use a letter to describe something follow the same rule
- We bought an L-shaped sofa
- note that L-shaped is an adjective
- We bought an L-shaped sofa
Definite article, the
the
- a modifier that indicates a particular or specific thing
- i.e., "the tree" indicates a certain, or particular tree
- similar to
- "this tree"
- "that tree"
- similar to
- the precedes any letter sound
- the dog
- the hour
Articles and adjectives
Both articles and adjectives modify nouns
- they may both modify a noun together
- when they do, the article comes first
- the big balloon
- a huge cow
- the indefinite article, an matches to the adjective and not the noun
- a person >> an awful person
- an hour >> a long hour
Articles and non-count & abstract nouns and generalizations
non-count and abstract nouns are nouns (things) that cannot be counted
- these noun forms do do not take articles:
- non-count nouns:
- ex. water: you can count drops or bodies of water, but not water)
- non-count nouns do not take indefinite articles;
- they can take the definite article (the)
- 🗴 We got stuck in
abad traffic - 🗸 We got stuck in bad traffic
- 🗸 We got stuck in the bad traffic
- they can also take adjectives and certain determiners (modifiers) such as
- some water
- any knowledge
- 🗴 We got stuck in
- abstract nouns
- generalizations
- proper nouns
note that many nouns have both non-count/abstract forms as well as regular nouns
- and remember that plural nouns never use the indefinite article (a/an)
Noun | Noun with Articles | Non-Count or Abstract form
without Articles |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|
advice | -- | That's good advice | |
knowledge | -- | Knowledge is power. | non-count nouns |
traffic | -- | The tr | |
water | -- | Water is necessary. | |
work | -- | Work makes worthy. | |
dog | A dog is fun.
The dog is fun. |
Dogs are fun. | absract nouns
or generalizations |
chicken | We ate a chicken for dinner. | We ate chicken for dinner | |
nurse | The nurse works hard. | Nurses work hard. | |
Washington DC | -- | Washington DC is close by | proper nouns (names) |
George | -- | George is my friend |
Notes:
- non-c
Here for a full list of non-count nouns: List of 130 Mass Nouns (Or Noncount Nouns) in English