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articles

Articles

What are 'articles' and how are they used in the English language? Read this post to find out.

Is there a difference between “She is a girl” and “She is the girl”? If you hear two guys talking about this topic, and you’re the one they are referring to, you might prefer the latter sentence to the former. Why? “THE GIRL” means a specific girl whereas “A GIRL” simply denotes any girl at all. Indeed, there is a huge difference in meaning just because of using two different articles (the and a). What are articles anyway?

Articles are a type of 
determiner that indicate if the noun modified is specific or not. The adjectives a, an and the are articles. A and an are indefinite articles and the is a definite article. A is used when the word after it starts with a consonant sound. An on the other hand is used when the word that follows it has a vowel sound.

Bring me a book. (means any book)
Bring me the book. (means a specific book)

He is an honest man. (although “honest” starts with the consonant “H”, it has a vowel sound in this word).
He went to a university in Tokyo. (although university starts with “U”, it has the consonant sound ‘YU”, thus needs the artcle “a” instead of “an”)

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