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Articles and Nouns


How to Use Articles (a/an/the) - Purdue OWL

Basically, an article is an adjective. Like adjectives, articles modify nouns. English has two articles: the and a/an. The is used to refer ...

Definite and Indefinite Articles (a, an, the) - TIP Sheets - Butte College

In English there are three articles: a, an, and the. Articles are used before nouns or noun equivalents and are a type of adjective.

Articles - Grammar - Academic Guides at Walden University

Articles ("a," "an," and "the") are determiners or noun markers that function to specify if the noun is general or specific in its reference. Often the article ...

What Are Articles in English Grammar? Definition and Examples

In English grammar, articles are words that appear before nouns to indicate whether the noun is specific or general. Definite articles (the) ...

What are definite and indefinite articles in English?

Articles are little words that come before nouns and give information about whether the noun is specific and familiar (definite) or generic or unfamiliar ( ...

Articles a, an, and the

Articles are placed before a noun (a person, place, thing, or idea) and they help the reader/listener understand whether a noun is specific or general. Let's ...

Articles and Noun Phrases*

What is an ARTICLE? In English, these four words—the, a, an, some—are called articles. An article joins with a noun to form a noun phrase.

Articles – English Grammar Lessons - YouTube

This video covers which articles to use with singular, plural, general, and specific nouns. Be sure to try the practice exercise at the end ...

Article Usage Guidelines | University Writing & Speaking Center

In English, articles (a, an, the) are like adjectives. They come before and modify nouns. However, articles do not have clearly defined meanings, ...

DEFINITE and INDEFINITE ARTICLES: the, a, an

Articles act much like adjectives. Articles clarify whether a noun is specific or general, singular or plural. An article appears before the noun it accompanies ...

Articles [pdf] - San Jose State University

There are three articles in the English language: a, an, and the. They are placed before nouns and show whether a given noun is general or specific. Examples of ...

Articles

These articles “modify” nouns by telling us specific things about those nouns: The definite article (the) is used for particular or specific nouns. • “Mom said ...

The definite article, the, is used before both singular and plural ...

An article has the same basic function as an adjective in that it is used to describe a noun. There are two different articles in the English ...

Articles in English | Types, Usage & Examples - Lesson - Study.com

Some proper nouns always take definite articles. The definite article "the" should be used when referring to a proper noun, a person or an organization that ...

Articles - The Writing Center | Montana State University

Articles ; This resource explains when to use the definite article (the), when to use an indefinite article ( ; Remember: If you have a singular countable noun ...

Articles

Definite v. Indefinite. The is a definite article. It can be used with both mass and count nouns (see below). A/An are indefinite articles.

A, the, an or some? Articles with abstract nouns in doctoral writing

The silent all rule may be useful for doctoral writers using abstract nouns. We use 'the' and 'some' for both countable and uncountable nouns.

Articles: 'a', 'an', 'the' | LearnEnglish - British Council

Singular, countable nouns always have an article – a/an or the (or another determiner – my, your, this, that, etc.). We use a/an – the indefinite article – when ...

When to Use 'A,' 'An,' or 'The' - Definite and Indefinite Articles

General Rules · Use “a” or “an” with a singular-count noun when you mean “one of many,” “any,” or “in general.” · Use “the” with any noun when the meaning is ...

Articles Grammar Tutorials - Miami University

Understanding the context in which a noun or noun phrase occurs will help you use articles correctly. ... Countable Nouns. Use "a/an" when countable nouns ...