| 6-L) The article (EnglishAnyone) | 
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				UNIT 6 lesson L | 
The basic use of English articles is quite simple.
A & an are indefinite articles. 
The is the definite article. 
a/an vs the:
Use A/AN when you are selecting one of a group and THE when there is only one of something.
A LITTLE MORE ADVANCED
Now you know the basic idea, so let's explain more details about the article:
 The Article
 
 DEFINITE ARTICLE
 The 
 singular & plural
 - the boy / the boys
 INDEFINITE ARTICLE
 A/An 
 singular
 A + consonant:
 - a boy, a car
 AN + vowel
 - an apple, an ambulance
 We don't use this article in the plural:
 - I can see a boy and trees (not: a trees)
 
 We use the definite article if everybody knows what we are talking about:
 - the sun is yellow
 - This is a family. The mother is Susan
 We use the indefinite article when we don't know (or they don't know) what  we are exactly talking about:
 - I want a car (I'm not thinking of a particular car, this car is fine,  or that  car is fine, or your car is fine, I don't care)
 - This is an apple (we didn't know this apple before)
 That's why we usually use A the first time we talk about something, but later we  use THE because now everybody knows exactly what particular thing we are  talking about:
 - This is an apple and this is an orange. Which do you prefer?
 - I prefer the apple (now we know exactly what apple we are talking about)
 
 We don't use the article in front of proper names:
 - This is an apple / This is Tom (not: This is a Tom)
 - I like the sun / I like New York (not: I like the New  York)
 but we can say: I like the city of New  York 
 There are some exceptions. We can use the definite article in front of names of:
 - rivers, seas: the Nile, the Mississippi, the Pacific, the Atlantic
 - deserts, forests, gulfs, etc: the Sahara, the Black Forest, the Persian Gulf
 In all these cases there is an article because the article goes with a  common noun, present (1) or understood (2):
 (1) common noun understood:
 - the desert (this is not a proper noun)
 - the Sahara desert ("the" still goes with "desert")
 - the Sahara (the word "desert" is not present but it is understood)
 (2) common noun present
 - the forest
 - the Black forest 
 
 We don't use the article when we are talking about something in general:
 - I like flowers (flowers in general, all the  flowers)
 - I like the flowers in your garden (I'm talking about a particular group of flowers: the flowers in your garden)
 
 We don't use the indefinite article (a/an) with words that have no plural:
 - I have a book (1 book, 2 books)
 - I have water (1 water, 2 waters)  (but we  can say "the water": - Pass me the water, please)
 These nouns are called "uncountable" and we will see them later.