Articles

In English grammar, the articles are "a," "an," and "the." They define whether something is specific or unspecific. There are two types of article:

Table of Contents

The Two Types of Article

articles English grammar

Key Takeaway

"The" is called the definite article because it is used to indicate something specific.

"A" and "an" are called the indefinite articles because they are used to indicate something unspecific.

Articles Are Determiners

The articles are classified as determiners. A determiner sits before a noun to indicate quantity, possession, specificity, or definiteness. Read more about determiners.

Examples of the Definite and Indefinite Articles

Using Articles

Articles Go before Adjectives

Indefinite Articles Are Used with Singular Nouns

The indefinite article ("a," "an") is only for singular nouns. It is not used for plural nouns.

As the indefinite article specifies one thing (e.g., "a cup" means "one cup"), it is not used with non-countable nouns (e.g., "water," "air," "integrity"). For example:

Most commonly, the indefinite determiner "some" is used instead.

Articles Are Not Used with Possessive Determiners or Possessive Pronouns

Articles are not used with possessive determiners ("my," "your," "his," "her," "its," "our," "their") or possessive pronouns ("mine," "yours," "his," "hers," "ours," "theirs") as these already show that something is specific. For example:

Why Articles Are Important

Here are two common questions related to articles.

(Question 1) When Do You Use "An" and "A"?

The most common mistake involving articles is using "an" instead of "a" (or vice versa). This mistake occurs because writers believe "an" is used before a vowel and "a" before a consonant. That is not entirely accurate.

"An" is used before a vowel sound, and "a" is used before a consonant sound. The word sound is important because consonants can create vowel sounds, and vowels can create consonant sounds. Therefore, the use of "an" or "a" is determined by the sound not the letter. Look at these examples:

Be especially careful with abbreviations:

(Question 2) Do you say "an historic moment" or "a historic moment"?

The words "historic," "historical," "historian," "horrific," and even "hotel" are worthy of special mention because they are often spoken and written with the wrong version of the indefinite article. All of these words start with a consonant sound, as soft as it might be. Therefore, their article is "a" not "an."

Here are two other issues related to the articles.

(Issue 1) Writing a job title or an office name with a capital letter.

A job title (e.g., "president," "judge," "director") or the name of an office ("parliament," "court," "accounts section") is given a capital letter when it refers to a specific person or office, i.e., when it's a proper noun. So, when the definite article (i.e., "the") appears before such a title or name, there's a pretty good chance you'll need a capital letter.

Here's the guidance: If the job title or office name is being used for its dictionary definition, i.e., as a common noun, then don't use a capital letter. However, if the job title or office name nails it down to one specific person or office, then use a capital letter. Look at these examples:

(Issue 2) Capitalizing "The" when it starts a name (e.g., "The Beatles").

Key Points

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Take a different test on articles.

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Do a test on using "an" and "a."

This page was written by Craig Shrives.