When to Use 'A,' 'An,' or 'The'
There are several exceptions, or more complicated situations than the above chart covers. Below we have laid out some of the general and specific rules about using A, AN, and THE.
Remember, in order to use A, AN, and THE properly, you must know whether or not a noun is a Count or Non-Count Noun. (A count noun is the name of something that can be counted: one book, two books, three books. A non-count noun is the name of something that cannot be counted: milk, flour, freedom, justice).
| Use "a" or "an" | Use "the" | Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" | |
| General Rules | Use "a" or "an" with a singular count noun when you mean "one of many," "any," "in general."
|
Use "the" with any noun when the meaning is specific; for example, when the noun names the only one (or one) of a kind.
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" with a non-count noun when you mean "any," "in general."
|
Use "a" or "an" the first time you use a noun in a paragraph.
|
Use "the" the second time you use that same noun in the same paragraph.
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" with a plural count noun when you mean "some of many things," "any," "in general."
|
|
| Title | Use "a" or "an" if the title is not a specific title.
|
Use "the" if a specific person has a title or if only one person has a title.
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" if the person's name is given.
|
| Names of Countries | Non-specific
|
Use "the" if the name of the country is plural or indicates a group (of states, islands, etc.)
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the"
|
| Names of Continents | Non-specific
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the"
|
|
| Names of Some Geographical Areas | Use "the"
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the"
|
|
| Names of Cities and States | Non-specific
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the"
|
|
| Names of Streets | Don't Use "a," "an," or "the"
|
||
|---|---|---|---|
| Names of Oceans, Rivers, Seas, Deserts, Forests, Canals | Use a/an for non-specific
|
Use "the"
|
|
| Names of Lakes | Non-specific
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the"
|
|
| Names of Monuments, Memorials, Parks, and National Shrines | Use a/an if you write about a non-specific building or monument.
|
Use "the"
|
|
| Names of Colleges, Universities, and Other Schools | Use a/an for non-specific colleges or schools.
|
Use "the" if the title of the school has "of" or "for" in it.
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" if the school is named for a person or place.
|
| Names of Buildings on Gallaudet University Campus | Use a/an for non-specific buildings.
|
Use the with specific places that have no names.
|
Don't Use "a," "an," or "the" if a building on campus is named for a person.
|
If you are not sure what article to use with a noun, use the basic questions on the following chart as a guide. Here below are the example of Article; and for your information, in each details as well as sentence example, the group of (black) bold word(s) that use article word. It is also the group of underline that shows no article used.
| Questions | Guides | Examples | ||||
| 1. Common/Proper: Is it a common noun or a proper noun? |
It is a proper noun |
Singular uses no article | Tom Smith is here with his wife. | |||
| Plural uses the | The Smiths are here. | |||||
|
|
||||||
It is a common noun |
||||||
|
|
||||||
| 2. General/Specific: Does the reader know which thing(s) you mean? |
Yes, the reader knows (specific) | Singular uses the | The sun is bright. | |||
| Plural uses the | I like the shoes you are wearing. | |||||
|
|
||||||
No, the reader does not know (general) |
||||||
|
|
||||||
| 3. Count/ Non-Count: Can the noun be counted in English? |
Yes, it is countable | Singular uses a, an | Frank bought a new car with an old engine. | |||
| Plural uses no article | Books can be fun to read. | |||||
|
|
||||||
| No, it is not countable (It is a Non-Count Noun) | Non-Count Nouns can use either way: no article, or some | Americans enjoy freedom and liberty. | ||||
| I would like some water. | ||||||
