Level: beginner
We use the indefinite article, a/an, with singular nouns when the listener/reader does not know exactly which one we are referring to:
Police are searching for a 14-year-old girl.
We also use it to show that the person or thing is one of a group:
She is a pupil at London Road School.
Police have been looking for a 14-year-old girl who has been missing since Friday.
Jenny Brown is a pupil at London Road School. She is 1.6 metres tall, with short, blonde hair. When she left home, she was wearing a blue jacket, a blue and white blouse, dark blue jeans and blue shoes.
Anyone who has information should contact the local police on 0800 349 781.
We do not use an indefinite article with plural nouns or uncount nouns:
She was wearing blue shoes. (plural noun)
She has short, blonde hair. (uncount noun)
- The indefinite article 1
- The indefinite article 2
- The indefinite article 3
We use a before a consonant sound:
a banana (starts with /b/) | a university (starts with /j/) |
and an before a vowel sound:
an orange (starts with /o/) | an hour (starts with /au/) |
Note that the choice of a or an depends on sound, not spelling.
- The indefinite article 4
Hi Crokong,
I'd recommend thinking of it this way: 'what a ...!' shows a strong opinion or feeling, which can be positive or negative.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello amrita_enakshi,
'an' is the correct form here, since the word 'English' begins with a vowel sound.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team
Hello RamMin,
Please see Peter's response to another user who asked this same question. He explains this difference in detail there.
All the best,
Kirk
The LearnEnglish Team