「An」と「A」の使い方 - 文法モンスター
原題: An or A? - Grammar Monster
分析結果
- カテゴリ
- AI
- 重要度
- 54
- トレンドスコア
- 18
- 要約
- 「An」と「A」の使い方について、特に略語に対する使用に迷うことがある。これらの言葉は冠詞として知られており、正しい使い方を理解することが重要である。
- キーワード
An or A? An or A? Using "An" and "A" home ▸ sitemap ▸ common errors ▸ an or a? Writers are sometimes unsure whether to use "an" or "a," particularly with abbreviations. (The words "an" and "a" are known as articles .) The sound of a word's first letter determines whether to use "an" or "a." If the word starts with a vowel sound, you should use "an." If it starts with a consonant sound, you should use "a." For example: Buy a house in an hour. (Even though "house" and "hour" start with the same three letters ("hou"), "house" attracts "a," and "hour" attracts "an.") An unknown goblin killed a unicorn. (Even though "unknown" and "unicorn" start with the same two letters ("un"), "unknown" attracts "an," and "unicorn" attracts "a." Remember that it is the sound of the first letter that determines whether to use "an" or "a.") The Key Point Use "an" before a word or an abbreviation that starts with a vowel sound . If it does not start with a vowel sound, use "a." The key word here is sound . It is not a question of whether the word or abbreviation starts with a vowel . It is a question of whether it starts with a vowel sound . Look at these examples with abbreviations: A FROG missile (FROG (Free Rocket Over Ground) is pronounced "frog," i.e., with a consonant sound.) An FBI agent (The letter "F" starts with a vowel sound even though it is not a vowel .) Using "An" and "A" with Abbreviations Here are some more examples with abbreviations and acronyms (NB. Acronyms are abbreviations spoken like words.) An LRS (LRS = Linear Recursive Sequence) A TT race (TT = Tourist Trophy) It would be a honor. (The word "honor" starts with an "o" sound.) Send an US ambassador. (The abbreviation "US" starts with a "y" sound.) She was involved in a RTA. (RTA = Road Traffic Accident) (The abbreviation "RTA" starts with an "a" sound (i.e., "ar-tee-ay.") Abbreviations that start with the consonants F, H, L, M, N, R, S, and X attract "an" because they start with vowel sounds. For example: An FRS representative will be present after lunch. (FRS = Fellow of the Royal Society) A LF transmitter was found in the basement. (LF = Low Frequency) Beware of the Letter U Abbreviations that start with the vowel U attract "a" because U starts with the consonant sound "y." For example: A US ship spotted a U-boat. An UFO landed in 1967. Treat Acronyms Like Words Not Abbreviations An acronym is an abbreviation that is spoken like a word (e.g., BUPA, FOD, FEDEX). Therefore, as the first sound of FEDEX is "f," use "a" and not "an." For example: Tim worked in the air industry as a FOD inspector for a year. (FOD = Foreign Object Damage) Jack was a FEDEX courier. Read more about acronyms. An Historical or A Historical? Letters and sounds do not always correlate in English. When pronouncing the words "historic" and "historical," the accent falls on the second syllable, and many pronounce them as starting with a vowel. For those people, it is appropriate to use "an" before "historic" and "historical." Therefore, you have a choice depending on what sounds better for you. There is a lot of leniency on this issue. If you're still unsure, opt for "a historical" and "a historic" as these remain preferable – especially in formal writing. Read about the difference between "historic" and "historical." Show Instructions Below is a set of questions. (There is only question set in this lesson.) For each question, select the correct option. Once you have answered a question, click for an explanation of the correct answer. Good luck! Hide Instructions next test This page was written by Craig Shrives . You might also like... What are vowels? What are consonants? What are articles? What are adjectives? What are abbreviations? What are acronyms? Help us improve... Was something wrong? please tell us Use #gm to find us quicker . more info... share copy Create a QR code. create QR Five Quick Questions expand to full page show as slides send as homework print as handout More Games and Tests We have hundreds of games and tests .