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Will we use "a" or "an" with hour, highly etc Which is correct sentence. An highly talented or a highly talented. An highly populated area or a highly populated area. An hour or a hour. I was reading a newspaper in which it was mentioned " an highly populated area" what are the rules to use " a" or "an" with sentence staring with "h"
Oct 27, 2011 2:38 AM
Answers · 3
1
Don't think about what letter starts the word, think about what SOUND starts the word. In the case of "hour," the "h" is silent and the first sound is "OW"--that's why we use "an" (because it starts with the sound of a vowel). In the case of "highly," we hear the consonant "h" sound at the beginning, so we use "a." Other examples of this are "herb" and "honor."
October 27, 2011
It looks like the newspaper made a mistake - we use "an" with words beginning with H only when the H is silent; that is, when the word starts with an open vowel sound. Why do we do this? Well, the words with a silent H are drawn from French, which doesn't pronounce H in speech. Note: for "herb", only use "an" if you don't pronounce the H. In places where we pronounce that H, we always write "a herb". In some older texts, you will see "an historic moment" or "an hilarious joke"... again, this is a throwback to rules governing the French silent H.
October 27, 2011
"An highly populated..." is wrong. An is used before A, E, I, O, or U. But there's also a special rule, an is also used when the "h" is silent, such as in "hour". So you would say "an hour", but not "an highly" because you pronounce the H in "highly"
October 27, 2011
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