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Indefinite Article

The document discusses the use of definite and indefinite articles in English. It explains that a and an are indefinite articles used to refer to things not specifically known, such as "I saw an elephant". The definite article the is used when the listener knows the specific thing being referred to, such as "the apple you ate". No article is used for generalizations and with plural nouns like sports and uncountable nouns.

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32 views2 pages

Indefinite Article

The document discusses the use of definite and indefinite articles in English. It explains that a and an are indefinite articles used to refer to things not specifically known, such as "I saw an elephant". The definite article the is used when the listener knows the specific thing being referred to, such as "the apple you ate". No article is used for generalizations and with plural nouns like sports and uncountable nouns.

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Miljana
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Indefinite articles - a and an (determiners)

A and an are the indefinite articles. They refer to something not specifically known to the person you
are communicating with.

A and an are used before nouns that introduce something or someone you have not mentioned
before:-
For example: "I saw an elephant this morning."
"I ate a banana for lunch."

A and an are also used when talking about your profession:-


For example: "I am an English teacher."
"I am a builder."

Definite Article - the (determiners)

You use the when you know that the listener knows or can work out what particular
person/thing you are talking about.
For example: "The apple you ate was rotten."
"Did you lock the car?"

You should also use the when you have already mentioned the thing you are talking about.
For example: "She's got two children; a girl and a boy. The girl's eight and the boy's fourteen."

We use the to talk about geographical points on the globe.


For example: the North Pole, the equator

We use the to talk about rivers, oceans and seas


For example: the Nile, the Pacific, the English channel

We also use the before certain nouns when we know there is only one of a particular thing.
For example: the rain, the sun, the wind, the world, the earth, the White House etc..

(However if you want to describe a particular instance of these you should use a/an.)
For example:
"I could hear the wind." / "There's a cold wind blowing."

"What are your plans for the future?" / "She has a promising future ahead of her."

The is also used to say that a particular person or thing being mentioned is the best, most
famous, etc.
For example:
"Harry's Bar is the place to go."

"You don't mean you met the Tony Blair, do you?"

!Note - The doesn't mean all:-


For example:
"The books are expensive." = (Not all books are expensive, just the ones I'm talking about.)

"Books are expensive." = (All books are expensive.)

No article

We usually use no article to talk about things in general:-

Inflation is rising.

People are worried about rising crime. (Note! People generally, so no article)

You do not use an article when talking about sports.


For example:
My son plays football.

Tennis is expensive.

You do not use an article before uncountable nouns when talking about them generally.
For example: Information is important to any organisation.
Coffee is bad for you.

You do not use an article before the names of countries except where they indicate multiple areas
or contain the words (state(s), kindom, republic, union). Kingdom, state, republic and union are
nouns, so they need an article.
For example:
No article - Italy, Mexico, Bolivia, England

Use the - the UK (United Kingdom), the USA (United States of America), the Irish Republic

the Netherlands, the Philippines, the British Isles

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