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I am getting confused while using an article an. Because an is used while referring to vowels (a,e,i,o,u).

But today I read an article where for user they used a user.

My question is, why was an not used?

Could someone explain this with an example?

CocoPop
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Stephen
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    It's based on vowel sounds, not vowel letters. –  Jun 26 '14 at 13:48
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    @snailplane - exactly! This should be an answer. This is why you get 'a user', but 'an hour'. – michelle Jun 26 '14 at 13:51
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    @Stephen Welcome to ELL. It's based on sounds as snailplane suggested above. Please find more information in the link I suggested above. See also: http://english.blogoverflow.com/2011/11/articles-a-vs-an/, http://ell.stackexchange.com/q/6760/3281. – Damkerng T. Jun 26 '14 at 13:59
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    To those who are voting to close this question as a duplicate of the "an hour" question: I think this question is sufficiently distinct. For one, it's in the opposite sense. Furthermore, an English learner may not be aware that the pronunciation of "user" starts with a /j/ sound. (In fact, in some obscure legal usage, it doesn't!) – 200_success Jun 26 '14 at 16:14
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    @snailplane Thank you for your answer.firstly you are the one answered me in comment.But It could be good if you post as an answer. – Stephen Jun 26 '14 at 16:43
  • Sorry, I posted it as a comment because I voted to close, and of course it's nonsensical to both answer a question and vote to close. –  Jun 26 '14 at 23:17
  • @snailplane its ok.be happy :) – Stephen Jun 27 '14 at 11:44
  • Because humans are nog logical – Roel May 16 '17 at 08:42

1 Answers1

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The choice of a or an is made based on pronunciation, not spelling. The only reason the word an exists is because a followed by another vowel is awkward to pronounce.

Since user is pronounced /ˈjuːzə/, starting with a consonant "y" sound, the article a is appropriate, and an is not.

200_success
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