A and an are the indefinite articles. Can I omit it?

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anhnha

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bhaisahab

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A and an are the indefinite articles. They refer to something not specifically known to the person you are communicating with.
More:English Grammar - Learn English Grammar - Articles
Why the author use the article "the" here?
Can I replace it by "a"?

The author used it because "a" and "an" are the only indefinite articles. No, you can't replace it with "a". You could, however, omit it.
 

anhnha

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The author used it because "a" and "an" are the only indefinite articles. No, you can't replace it with "a". You could, however, omit it.
Thanks!
I see it now.
No, you can't replace it with "a". You could, however, omit it.
Sorry, it is a mistake. I intended to ask about omitting "the".
 

Raymott

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The author used it because "a" and "an" are the only indefinite articles. No, you can't replace it with "a". You could, however, omit it.
Yes, but omitting "the" changes the meaning. It's still true that 'a' and 'an' are indefinite articles, but that doesn't mean they're the only indefinite articles, as "... are the indefinite articles" does.
 

bhaisahab

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Yes, but omitting "the" changes the meaning. It's still true that 'a' and 'an' are indefinite articles, but that doesn't mean they're the only indefinite articles, as "... are the indefinite articles" does.

Yes, I agree.
 
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