冠词a,an,the的读音--By Roger Woodham

The

The is pronounced with an e sound, as in bee or flea, before a noun or adjective beginning with a vowel or a vowel sound, so we would say:

The is pronounced with an er sound, as in mother, father, brother, before a noun or an adjective beginning with a consonant or a consonant sound, so we would say:

Now practise these sentences, each of which contains two pronunciations of the with the e sound and two pronunciations of the with the er sound.

Did you notice how much easier it is to say the, as in see, rather then the, as in brother, when a vowel sound follows, the Irish, rather than the Irish? Note how the first pronunciation just flows off the tongue, whereas the second one doesn't.

Note that all abbreviations said as individual letters which begin with A, E, F, H, I, L, M, N, O, R, S, or X are pronounced as vowel sounds. They are therefore preceded by the as in see and an, rather than a, see below.

A

A is normally pronounced unstressed as er as in mother, father, brother.

If we wish to stress it, we can pronounce it as ay, as in say or day, though this is rather unusual:

We might stress a in this way if the circumstances are unusual and we want to savour every syllable.

A or an?

Whether we use a or an depends upon the pronunciation of the following adjective or noun, not on the spelling. If the adjective or noun starts with a vowel sound, even if it is written as a consonant, we use an:

An MP is a Member of Parliament and an IOU is an I-owe-you. Note how in pronunciation the n in an flows on to, and almost becomes attached to, the following adjective or noun. An MP becomes a Nem P, an honest day's work becomes a nonest day's work.

If the adjective or noun starts with a consonant sound, even if it is written as a vowel, we use a: