An Xbox

Q

Lifer
Jul 21, 2005
12,046
4
81
That's about the only word I can think of that doesn't follow the vowel rule with 'a' and 'an'

(well besides 'xray')
 

tfinch2

Lifer
Feb 3, 2004
22,114
1
0
Originally posted by: Quintox
That's about the only word I can think of that doesn't follow the vowel rule with 'a' and 'an'

(well besides 'xray')

Using a or an depends on the sound that begins the next word, not necessarily that is a vowel or not.

Example: a European
 

Yzzim

Lifer
Feb 13, 2000
11,990
1
76
Originally posted by: tfinch2
Originally posted by: Quintox
That's about the only word I can think of that doesn't follow the vowel rule with 'a' and 'an'

(well besides 'xray')

Using a or an depends on the sound that begins the next word, not necessarily that is a vowel or not.

Example: a European

an Unicorn?
 

BlackTigers

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2006
4,491
2
71
Originally posted by: Quintox
That's about the only word I can think of that doesn't follow the vowel rule with 'a' and 'an'

(well besides 'xray')

If you pronounced it za-box (xylophone?) then it'd b "a".
 

tfinch2

Lifer
Feb 3, 2004
22,114
1
0
Originally posted by: Yzzim
Originally posted by: tfinch2
Originally posted by: Quintox
That's about the only word I can think of that doesn't follow the vowel rule with 'a' and 'an'

(well besides 'xray')

Using a or an depends on the sound that begins the next word, not necessarily that is a vowel or not.

Example: a European

an Unicorn?

:confused: Did you even read what I wrote?

Unicorn begins with a vowel, but not a vowel sound.
 

ObiDon

Diamond Member
May 8, 2000
3,435
0
0
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:
 

Vehemence

Banned
Jan 25, 2008
5,943
0
0
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

"A" is sometimes interchanged with "one"
 

newb111

Diamond Member
Oct 8, 2003
6,991
1
81
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

Because a = 1

They say "a hundred" instead of "one hundred"
 

ObiDon

Diamond Member
May 8, 2000
3,435
0
0
Originally posted by: newb111
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

Because a = 1

They say "a hundred" instead of "one hundred"
yes, but "$100" means "one-hundred dollars. you don't say "a one-hundred dollars."
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

you're writing it wrong :p
"and it cost a hundred dollars"
versus
"and it cost a one hundred dollars"

which is it? Because I've never heard anyone say the latter, but even I've said the former... on many occasions.
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
359
126
Originally posted by: ObiDon
Originally posted by: newb111
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

Because a = 1

They say "a hundred" instead of "one hundred"
yes, but "$100" means "one-hundred dollars. you don't say "a one-hundred dollars."

are you referring to type, or speech? I've yet to see that in text, but I wouldn't doubt it either, because people might be confused and would rather type '100' instead of 'hundred', forgetting that they would be pronounced differently.

Unless, of course, the sentence is "I found a $100 bill!" :p
 

ObiDon

Diamond Member
May 8, 2000
3,435
0
0
Originally posted by: destrekor
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

you're writing it wrong :p
"and it cost a hundred dollars"
versus
"and it cost a one hundred dollars"

which is it? Because I've never heard anyone say the latter, but even I've said the former... on many occasions.
that's exactly my point! i purposely gave that as a bad example. :)
people on these forums (not in spoken language) do it that way all the time.
 

z0mb13

Lifer
May 19, 2002
18,106
1
76
English is not my native tongue but I learned this a longgg time ago back in primary school

You guys suck :p

Another example: A university

 

newb111

Diamond Member
Oct 8, 2003
6,991
1
81
Originally posted by: ObiDon
Originally posted by: destrekor
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

you're writing it wrong :p
"and it cost a hundred dollars"
versus
"and it cost a one hundred dollars"

which is it? Because I've never heard anyone say the latter, but even I've said the former... on many occasions.
that's exactly my point! i purposely gave that as a bad example. :)
people on these forums (not in spoken language) do it that way all the time.

I have never seen anyone write it "a $100"
 
Sep 29, 2004
18,656
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Originally posted by: Quintox
That's about the only word I can think of that doesn't follow the vowel rule with 'a' and 'an'

(well besides 'xray')

I don't give an F what you think about English. You are going to have an H-E-L-L of a time expalining yourself.

Ef
Eich
El
Em
En
Arrrrrr
Es
Ecks

Scrabble is fun. I only know some of hte letters, but knowing the ef, em, en and el are words is very useful. Along with aa, a type of lava flow.
 
Sep 29, 2004
18,656
68
91
Originally posted by: newb111
Originally posted by: ObiDon
what i want to know is why we repeatedly see an "a" before "100" or "$100"
"i bought a backpack and it cost a $100." :confused:

Because a = 1

They say "a hundred" instead of "one hundred"

They say a hundred because hundred starts wit ha consonant. And your example is not even proper english ... congrats on that.
 
Sep 29, 2004
18,656
68
91
Originally posted by: z0mb13
English is not my native tongue but I learned this a longgg time ago back in primary school

You guys suck :p

Another example: A university

U as in you-na-ver-sit-ee?

You do see why it is "a university" I hope.
 

Nik

Lifer
Jun 5, 2006
16,101
3
56
Originally posted by: Quintox
That's about the only word I can think of that doesn't follow the vowel rule with 'a' and 'an'

(well besides 'xray')

The rule is SPOKEN. You decide whether "a" or "an" goes before a word based on how it sounds when you say it, not what letter starts the word.