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Articles - Origin/Relics/A/An/The/Def./Kinds - Parts Of Speech-ESL/Learn English Grammar

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171. There is a class of words having always an adjectival use in

general, but with such subtle functions and various meanings that they

deserve separate treatment. In the sentence, "He passes an ordinary

brick house on the road, with an ordinary little garden," the words

_the_ and _an_ belong to nouns, just as adjectives do; but they cannot

be accurately placed under any class of adjectives. They are nearest

to demonstrative and numeral adjectives.


[Sidenote: _Their origin._]


172. The article the comes from an old demonstrative adjective

(_se_, _seo_, _ðat_, later _the_, _theo_, _that_) which was also an

article in Old English. In Middle English _the_ became an article, and

_that_ remained a demonstrative adjective.


An or a came from the old numeral _an_, meaning _one_.


[Sidenote: _Two relics._]


Our expressions _the one_, _the other_, were formerly _that one_,

_that other_; the latter is still preserved in the expression, in

vulgar English, _the tother_. Not only this is kept in the Scotch

dialect, but the former is used, these occurring as _the tane, the

tother_, or _the tane, the tither_; for example,--


We ca' her sometimes _the tane_, sometimes _the tother_.--SCOTT.


[Sidenote: An _before vowel sounds_, a _before consonant sounds_.]


173. Ordinarily _an_ is used before vowel sounds, and _a_ before

consonant sounds. Remember that a _vowel sound_ does not necessarily

mean beginning with a vowel, nor does _consonant sound_ mean

beginning with a consonant, because English spelling does not

coincide closely with the sound of words. Examples: "_a_ house," "_an_

orange," "_a_ European," "_an_ honor," "_a_ yelling crowd."


[Sidenote: An _with consonant sounds_.]


174. Many writers use _an_ before _h_, even when not silent, when

the word is not accented on the first syllable.


_An_ historian, such as we have been attempting to describe,

would indeed be an intellectual prodigy.--MACAULAY.


The Persians were _an_ heroic people like the Greeks.--BREWER.


He [Rip] evinced _an_ hereditary disposition to attend to

anything else but his business.--IRVING.


_An_ habitual submission of the understanding to mere events and

images.--COLERIDGE.


_An_ hereditary tenure of these offices.--THOMAS JEFFERSON.


[Sidenote: _Definition._]


175. An article is a limiting word, not descriptive, which cannot

be used alone, but always joins to a substantive word to denote a

particular thing, or a group or class of things, or any individual of

a group or class.


[Sidenote: _Kinds._]


176. Articles are either definite or indefinite.


The is the definite article, since it points out a particular

individual, or group, or class.


An or a is the indefinite article, because it refers to any one of

a group or class of things.

An and a are different forms of the same word, the older _an_.






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