Articles in English
Articles in English
First the good news:There are only three articles in English: a, an and the. There are two types of articles indefinite 'a' and 'an' or definite 'the'. You also need to know when not to use an article. The bad news is that their proper use is complex, especially when you get into the advanced use of English. Quite often you have to work it out by what sounds right, which can be frustrating for a learner.
So, "a university" IS correct. We say "hour" with a silent h as though it were spelt "our". So, "an hour" IS correct. (Lots of people get this wrong - including native speakers.)
For example:
"Harry's Bar is the place to go." "You don't mean you met the Tony Blair, do you?"
!Note - The doesn't mean all:"The books are expensive." = (Not all books are expensive, just the ones I'm talking about.) For example: "Books are expensive." = (All books are expensive.)
No article
We usually use no article to talk about things in general:Inflation is rising. People are worried about rising crime. (Note! People generally, so no article) You do not use an article when talking about sports. For example: My son plays football. Tennis is expensive.
You do not use an article before uncountable nouns when talking about them generally. For example: Information is important to any organisation. Coffee is bad for you.
You do not use an article before the names of countries except where they indicate multiple areas or contain the words (state(s), kindom, republic, union). Kingdom, state, republic and union are nouns, so they need an article. No article - Italy, Mexico, Bolivia, England For Use the - the UK (United Kingdom), the USA (United States of America), the example: Irish Republic Multiple areas! the Netherlands, the Philippines, the British Isles