A, An or The?
The and a/an are called
"articles". We divide them into "definite" and
"indefinite" like this:
Articles
|
|
Definite
|
Indefinite
|
the
|
a, an
|
We use
"definite" to mean sure, certain. "Definite" is particular.
We use
"indefinite" to mean not sure, not certain. "Indefinite" is
general.
When we are
talking about one thing in particular, we use the. When we are talking
about one thing in general, we use a or an.
Think of the
sky at night. In the sky we see 1 moon and millions of stars. So
normally we would say:
- I saw the moon last night.
- I saw a star last night.
Look at these examples:
the
|
a, an
|
|
|
Of course,
often we can use the or a/an for the same word. It depends on the
situation, not the word. Look at these examples:
- We want to buy an umbrella. (Any umbrella, not a particular umbrella.)
- Where is the umbrella? (We already have an umbrella. We are looking for our umbrella, a particular umbrella.)
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