PS: Take a look at these free English educational resources: Free training: Collocations with keep — At all — Double Object Verbs (Ditransitive verbs) — GERUNDS
- ProstosoniaAugust 2018
GIVE ANSWERS
AussieInBgOctober 2020 For uncountable nouns, we never use ”a/an”.
For example, ”advice” is uncountable in English. We don’t say ”two advices”, we might use ”two pieces of advice”. So, ”He gave me advice” is correct. |
MercentPerraultSeptember 2020 An unspoken but general rule is that “a” should be used before words beginning with consonants and “an” should be used before words beginning with vowels words which at least sound like they’re beginning with vowels, like for eg, an hour. |
WeylinSeptember 2020 The basic rule is:
Often people will tell you that it's about something specific, but this is misleading. There are quite a few more rules. https://johnsenglishblog.com/posts/articles/
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