ARTICLES INDEFINITE ARTICLES DEFINITE ARTICLES

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A/ an. We use a/ an with singular countable nouns Note: Use a in front of a word that starts with a consonant sound, and Use an in front of a word that.
Advertisements

Articles A/an The Zero article.
We have two kind of articles: Indefinitea an Definite the.
Definite and Indefinite Articles
Countable and Uncoutable Nouns. Countable Nouns Individual objects people ideas.
To Like or not to like? I like…. I love…  I don’t mind… + ing   I hate … I like…. I love…  I don’t mind… + ing   I hate …
The Article. “In Russian, we do not use article. It is better language.” “In Russian, we do not use article. It is better language.”
The articles Svetlana Egorova English The articles
Smart Choice Level 2 Unit 10 - Grammar
Articles: a/an/the. A O We use a before words which begin with consonants O We use a before u when it sound like the word “you”, and before eu: a uniform,
3rd ESO Countable nouns & Uncountable nouns.
Uses of The. Singular or pluralTypes of articlesArticlesNouns BothThe = definite article a/an = indefinite articles ( an= a e u I o) The – a – anCountable.
GROCERIES LIST CAN BE COUNTED WITH NUMBER ARE IN SINGULAR OR PLURAL FORM 5.
GRAMMAR: ARTICLES What, Why, and How? 14. Articles What are they? The English language has definite (“the”) and indefinite articles (“a” and “an”). The.
Nouns! People, places, things, dates…. Common or Proper? Proper Nouns names of specific nouns (meaning there is usually only one of them) names of people,
THE INDEFINITE ARTICLE
The articles College Watson and Crick English The articles Teacher Ivette Jazmin Contreras.
ARTICLES Prep I Kashif Saeed December 04, 2010 Prep I Kashif Saeed December 04, 2010.
Definite and indefinite articles a, an and the INDEFINITE ARTICLES aan housei-pod cell phoneApple deskOyster HospitalOctopus PenOrange MuseumUmbrella.
Determiners SPAG. What are determiners? A determiner is used to modify a noun. It indicates reference to something specific or something of a particular.
A, An and THE. Articles A and AN  A and AN are called indefinite articles. "Indefinite" means "not specific". Use A(AN) when you are talking about a.
Focus On Grammar Book 2, 5 th edition Lesson 14: Articles Other/Another Indefinite Pronouns.
Let’s go shopping! Unit 4.
SECTION 9 Quantity and Degree Words. All, almost all of, most of and some of All Almost all of Most of Some of.
Brought to you by powerpointpros.com. A noun names a person, place, thing, or idea.
Indefinite articles With singular countable nouns When we name or describe things When we refer to one example.
The articles The articles divide into two parts a an The With all the letters except vowels. With the vowel letters ( a – o – e – i – u ). With all letters.
The Rule and Application for Articles UMEI Workshop 2.
ALG ch 28.1 Printable version. Indefinite articles With singular countable nouns When we name or describe things When we refer to one example of a class.
Articles.
FCE B Articles. Articles Indefinite article aan The indefinite article means ONE. It can only be used with singular countable nouns or.
Subject Verb Agreement What does that mean?. Agreement of Subject and Verb A verb should agree in number with its subject.
The Use of Articles. Articles are words used in front of nouns to identify them as being... general (indefinite) a a woman specific (definite) the the.
IN ENGLISH, KNOWING WHEN TO USE 'A' OR 'THE' CAN BE DIFFICULT. FORTUNATELY, THERE ARE RULES TO HELP YOU, BUT YOU NEED TO KNOW WHAT TYPE OF NOUN YOU ARE.
Nouns, articles and quantifiers Read Pages 42 and 43 attentively
Most of the nouns are countable. You can combine them with numbers one, two, three… They usually have a singular and plural form. Countable nouns are.
Countable, Uncountable Nouns Countable Nouns: things that can be counted with numbers. eg. 1.One book, two books 2.One pen, two pens 3.A car, an hour And.
Countable and Uncountable Nouns. English nouns are often described as "countable" or "uncountable". In this lesson we are going to look at: –Countable.
ARTICLES  WHAT ARE ARTICLES?  USES OF ARTICLES.
A/an //the and zero article Use of articles in English.
Articles.
Determiners.
Countable & Uncountable nouns
Articles(a,an,the).
The articles.
Adjectives Definition: Used to describe nouns or pronouns
Academic Lyceum of National University of Uzbekistan
VERBS SUBJECT-VERB-OBJECT Every sentence has a verb.
Countable & Uncountable Nouns Articles a/an & The
ARTICLES.
PARTS OF SPEECH.
Articles © Cindy Leibel 2015 – Please do not use without written permission.
By HERBER.
THE PARTS OF SPEECH Created by Cindy Leibel
UNIT 4 1st Course ESO.
Let’s go shopping! Unit 4.
Articles Huge Mistakes to Avoid!
Articles © Cindy Leibel 2015 – Please do not use without written permission.
Pronouns.
Definite and Indefinite Articles
Parts of Speech -- Always
Pronoun/Antecedent Agreement
OBJECT PRONOUNS.
Definite and Indefinite Articles
Summer semester English 2
Articles Bryan Lopez.
Articles Huge Mistakes to Avoid!.
QUANTIFIERS.
Articles.
[BEGINNING OF INTERACTIVE PRESENTATION (Screens 4-16)]
Presentation transcript:

ARTICLES INDEFINITE ARTICLES DEFINITE ARTICLES Articles go before nouns. Like adjectives, they give us more information about the noun. INDEFINITE ARTICLES DEFINITE ARTICLES We use indefinite articles, when we talk about something for the first time. an (+ a, e, i, o, u) a (+b,c,d,f,g,h,j,k,l,m,n,p,q,r,s,t,v,w,x,y,z) Like pronouns, we can only use definite articles when we know what you are talking about. the

ARTICLES INDEFINITE ARTICLES DEFINITE ARTICLES Articles go before nouns. But some go before singular and plurals nouns, and some only go before singular. INDEFINITE ARTICLES DEFINITE ARTICLES a/an can only go before singular nouns. I have a pizza. He has an apple. They are riding a bicycle. the can go before singular or plural nous. Give me the pens. Give me the pencil.

ARTICLES INDEFINITE ARTICLES DEFINITE ARTICLES Articles go before nouns. INDEFINITE ARTICLES DEFINITE ARTICLES a/an can mean “one”, so we cannot use it with uncountable nouns, but we can use the with uncountable nouns. I have chocolate. I have the chocolate. Sometimes we know what you’re talking about because there’s only one in the world, or they’re all the same (so we understand enough). the beach, the park, the library, the moon, the sky, the sun

NO ARTICLE (Ø) (NOTHING) ARTICLES Articles go before nouns. There are many times when you cannot use either a/an or the. NO ARTICLE (Ø) (NOTHING) If there is more than one, but it’s the first time we talk about it, use Ø. I have Ø pizzas. He has Ø apples. They are riding Ø bicycles. We you are talking about all of something, you use Ø. But countable nouns are always plural, in this case. Ø Water is very wet. I love Ø koalas.

NO ARTICLE (Ø) (NOTHING) ARTICLES Articles go before nouns. There are many times when you cannot use either a/an or the. NO ARTICLE (Ø) (NOTHING) Most times you cannot use an article before the name of something (like a city, or a building). I went to see Ø Taipei 101. My favourite country is Ø Iceland. But we can use the if the name is an adjective used to describe a noun. I went to the Great Wall of China. I like the L.A. Lakers.

ADJECTIVES: COMPARATIVES & SUPERLATIVES Fill in the missing article. There are four choices: a, an, the, Ø. I went to ___ concert last weekend. I can see ___ ocean from my house. My teacher gave me ___ homework last night. I need ___ idea for my poster.

ADJECTIVES: COMPARATIVES & SUPERLATIVES Fill in the missing article. There are four choices: a, an, the, Ø. I need to go to ___ hospital. Do I have ___ food in my teeth? Can you put ___ pen under your desk into the garbage? I love eating ___ apples for breakfast.