Walter Published by Oxford. 1) A/an shows that we are talking about 1 person or thing. 2) The usually means you know which one(s) I m talking about.

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From: THE GOOD GRAMMAR BOOK by Michael Swan and Catherine Walter Published by Oxford. 1) A/an shows that we are talking about 1 person or thing. We often use a/an: In descriptions She s an interesting person He s got a loud voice. When we say what something is, or what someone s job is This is a return ticket. I m an engineer. 2) The usually means you know which one(s) I m talking about. Can I use the phone? the listener knows that this means your phone. We use the, not a /an, to talk about somebody or something, when the speaker and listener both know about this person or thing; when they both know which one(s). Could you close the door (you know which door) Could you open a window? (I don t mind which one.) I m going to the post office (you know which one the one that is near here.) Is there a post office near here? I didn t like the film ( the one that we saw) Nouns used without articles often have a special meaning. Let s go and see film He looked at moon ( the only one there is) She s in front room ( you know which room I m telling you) I need room for the night How much is red coat? ( you know which coat I m telling you) I ve just bought new coat 3) We use the before words like only, first, second etc We use the before superlatives like oldest, most: She s the only one for me It s the oldest restaurant in Glasgow I live on the second floor 1

4) We often use a/an to talk about a person or thing for the first time We use the when we talk about the person or thing again: A man walked up to a policeman. The man took out a map and asked the policeman 5) We don t use a /an with plurals We can use the with plurals : She s wearing black shoes. She bought the shoes last week. I dislike cats. this means all cats cats in general. 2

Look at the following exercise. Does it need the /a/ an or does it need no article (-)? 1.Where did you put butter? 2. I speak French. 3. I often listen to music. 4. phone s downstairs in kitchen. 5. She s got nice face and blue eyes. 6. Canada is big country. 7.This table is made of glass. Is this correct or wrong? 1. She s from the Texas. 2. I m at Oxford Station. 3. He was in the bed at 10.00 We do not normally use the to talk about people or things in general. The does not mean all. We use the to talk about particular people or things. 3

Countable and uncountable nouns Countable nouns are words like: car, book and chair. They are the names of things that you can count. You can say: one car, two books, three chairs. They can be singular (a book, one cat) They can be plural (two chairs, lots of books) Uncountable nouns are words like: smoke, rice, water, petrol. These are things that you can t count. You can say smoke / rice / water but not one smoke / two rices / three waters We often use an uncountable noun (without a/an) to say what something is made of: It s made of glass. This shirt is made of silk. Look at these nouns: Bird bottles blood children flower love meat mountains music nose oil photos piano river snow Table river songs Put these nouns under the right heading: SINGULAR COUNTABLE PLURAL COUNTABLE UNCOUNTABLE 4

We use a/an before singular countable nouns. A/an is a bit like saying one. You can t say one houses or one air. Put a/an or nothing ( ): 1. Jake s father makes films. 2. I need new bicycle. 3. I never drink milk. 4. Jane is old friend. 5. Their house is made of wood. 6. I often listen to music. 7. The police are looking for him with dogs. 8. My room has got really big window 9. She is wearing skirt We use one instead of a/an when the exact number is important e.g. Can I have a cheese sandwich? No, I asked for one sandwich not two. I only want one sandwich. Put in a/an or one: She s got nice coat. She s only got coat. Can I have boiled egg? No, I said egg not two. I ve got problem. Can you help? She s only got child. John s got beautiful sister. 5