Determiners: A, An or The?
When do we say "the dog" and when do we say "a dog"? (On this
page we talk only about singular, countable nouns.)
The and A/An are called "articles". We divide them into
"definite" and "indefinite" like this:
Articles |
Definite |
Indefinite |
The |
A, An |
We use "definite" to mean sure, certain. "Definite" is particular.
We use "indefinite" to mean not sure, not certain. "Indefinite" is
general.
When we are talking about one thing in particular, we use the. When
we are talking about one thing in general, we use a or an.
Think of the sky at night. In the sky there is 1 moon and millions of stars.
So normally we could say:
- I saw the moon last night.
- I saw a star last night.
Look at these examples:
The |
A, An |
- The capital of France is Paris.
- I have found the book that I lost.
- Have you cleaned the car?
- There are six eggs in the fridge.
- Please switch off the TV when you finish.
|
- I was born in a town.
- John had an omelette for lunch.
- James Bond ordered a drink.
- We want to buy an umbrella.
- Have you got a pen?
|
Of course, often we can use The or A/An for the same word. It
depends on the situation. Look at these examples:
- We want to buy an umbrella. (Any umbrella, not a particular
umbrella.)
- Where is the umbrella? (We already have an umbrella. We are looking
for our umbrella, a particular umbrella.)
This little story should help you understand the difference between
The and A, An:
- A man and a woman were walking in Oxford Street. The
woman saw a dress that she liked in a shop. She asked the
man if he could buy the dress for her. He said: "Do you think the
shop will accept a cheque? I don't have a credit card."
|