Rob Hello again. Welcome to 6 Minute Grammar with me, Rob.
Emma And me, Emma. Hello.
Rob In today's programme, we're talking about three little words: a, an and the.
Emma Also known as articles. So let's start by saying hello to Finn.
Finn Hello.
Emma And Finn, you're going to tell us about your time in Phnom Penh, which is the capital city of Cambodia. Listen out for the words a, an and the.
Finn Yes, I was living in a flat near the city centre. I was lucky because every morning I saw an elephant walk past my front door. The elephant was giving rides to tourists. The owner told me that her name was Sambo. I discovered later that she was the only elephant in Phnom Penh. Here's a photo.
Rob/Emma Ahhh...
Emma And quite a few articles there. We had a flat and a photo...
Rob Yes, we use a before singular nouns. A flat and a photo...
Emma ...but in spoken English it's 'uh' not 'a'.
Finn I was living in a flat. Here's a photo.
Emma Now, Finn also said he saw an elephant. Not a elephant. An elephant.
Rob That's because 'elephant' begins with 'e'. We use an, not a, before nouns that begin with 'a', 'e', 'i', 'o' - and most words starting with 'u'. We say an apple, an elephant, an ice-cream, an orange, an uncle.
Emma But in spoken English, an sounds like 'un'. Finn.
Finn An apple, an elephant, an ice-cream, an orange, an uncle.
Rob Now let's look at the [thuh] and the [thee]. Finn said:
Finn The elephant was giving rides to tourists...
Emma Yes, and it's the elephant because it's the second time he mentions the elephant:
Rob A first time, and the [thuh] or the [thee] second time. And it's the [thee] not the [thuh] with elephant because elephant starts with 'e'. Finn.
Finn I saw an elephant. The elephant was giving rides to tourists.
Emma Ok ... Now there was another one - the owner. Finn only mentioned the owner once, so why the [strong form] and not an [strong form]?
Rob Good question, and the answer is: we use the before a person or thing when it's clear exactly which person or thing we're talking about, even if it's the first time. Let's hear it again:
Finn The owner told me that her name was Sambo.
Emma So Finn's talking about the owner of Sambo, not the owner of any unknown elephant.
Rob Ok, so that's a, an and the. Now let's hear more about elephants. Can you spot the articles in this sentence?
Finn African elephants are bigger than Indian elephants.
Rob Actually there were no articles. Trick question, sorry! There's no article before African elephants and Indian elephants because we're talking about African elephants and Indian elephants in general...
Emma ...not a specific African or Indian elephant.
Rob So in Finn's story, he didn't use an article when he talked about tourists in general.
Finn The elephant was giving rides to tourists.
IDENT You're listening to BBC Learning English.
Emm And we're talking about articles.
Rob And now here are some top tips for using the.
Emma Tip one. Don't use the before the names of most countries, cities and continents.
Rob Just say: Saudi Arabia, Warsaw and Europe.
Emma Tip two: say the with countries with plural names or the words Republic or Kingdom in the name...
Rob The Maldives, The United Arab Emirates.
Emma Tip three: use the for the names of rivers, seas, oceans and mountain ranges...
Rob The Mississippi, The Red Sea, The Andes.
Emma Tip four: Don't use the before names of single mountains and lakes...
Rob Mount Kilimanjaro, Lake Titicaca.
Emma And now it's quiz time. I'm going to say a sentence with or without an article and you have to say if it's correct or wrong. Ready? Number 1: I've got cat.
Rob That's wrong. It should be I've got a cat. Because you need an article before a singular noun when you mention it the first time. Or you can say I've got the cat if it's clear which cat we're talking about.
Emma Number 2. I'm going on holiday to United States next week. I'm so excited!
Rob Wrong again. It should be I'm going to the United States next week because it's a plural country name.
Emma And number 3. I love elephants!
Rob And that's correct because you're talking about elephants in general, so: no article needed.
Emma Well done if you got those right.
Rob There's lots more information about articles on our website at bbclearningenglish.com. Join us again for more 6 Minute Grammar.