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Usenet Posted 18 years ago
English in UK

An 80% decrease ~ a 80% decrease

I stumbled upon the latter use recently, and it got me thinking. There seems to be some exceptions to the simple rule that I still use when deciding on "a" or "an"...
If you go by the word "decrease", the "a 80% decrease" would be correct, but should you really dismiss the preceding "eighty"? Why? Because it's not a word, but a number?
I go by the first letter of the first word after the prefix. Except for certain words, where the letter makes a "vocal sound", instead of a "vowel sound". (What is the proper term for this, incidentally?)
These are some examples of what I would use. Am I wrong anywhere?:

An 80% decrease
A 50% increase
A door
An office door
A herd
An herb (because the h is mute)
An orange
A yellow orange
A boat
An orange boat
... Anyone have some fun or interesting examples in this exercise? Or some links for simplified rules on the matter?
  

Top answer

[nq:1]I stumbled upon the latter use recently, and it got me thinking. There seems to be some exceptions to the ... Anyone have some fun or interesting examples in this exercise?

  • [nq:1]I stumbled upon the latter use recently, and it got me thinking.
  • There seems to be some exceptions to the ...
  • Anyone have some fun or interesting examples in this exercise?
  • [/nq] You're right with all these.
  • However, the 'h' in 'herb' is NOT mute in UK English so in that context you would say "a herb".
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2 Answers
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[nq:1]I stumbled upon the latter use recently, and it got me thinking. There seems to be some exceptions to the ... ... Anyone have some fun or interesting examples in this exercise? Or some links for simplified rules on the matter?[/nq]
You're right with all these. However, the 'h' in 'herb' is NOT mute in UK English so in that context you would say "a herb".

A rule often followed in
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[nq:1]I stumbled upon the latter use recently, and it got me thinking. There seems to be some exceptions to the simple rule that I still use when deciding on "a" or "an"...[/nq]
Don't make it too complicated! It goes almost entirely by the results when spoken. "an 80" could just as easily be written "an eighty". The mute h is fairly rare nowadays, both spoken and written, and "an hotel" would

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