Definition of indefinite article in US English:
indefinite article
nounɪnˈdɛf(ə)nət ˈˌɑrdəkəl
Grammar A determiner (a and an in English) that introduces a noun phrase and implies that the thing referred to is nonspecific (as in she bought me a book; government is an art; he went to a public school). Typically, the indefinite article is used to introduce new concepts into a discourse.
Compare with definite article
Example sentencesExamples
- Using the feminine personal pronoun as an indefinite article is as moronic as using the masculine personal pronoun for personification.
- It seems to me that the argument requires not only reading ‘or’ in a particular way but substituting the definite article for the indefinite article.
- There may be a difference between the definite article and the indefinite article, and there are different views on capital letters, I suppose.
- The use of the indefinite article with predicate nouns is to some extent an idiosyncratic feature of English.
- For example, Gordon's speech as represented by Odum has some striking aspects that, like the regular omission of definite and indefinite articles, can only be attributed to an unusual idiolect.