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maqroll

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A person's accent doesn't change written grammar :rant: Even 'an homed' dog doesn't live in 'an house' :)

/hijack

He might live in an hotel though.
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He might live in an hotel though.

And it would not be an historic occasion either if he did (that's probably the most prevalent abuse of that particular indefinite article).
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He might live in an hotel though.

And it would not be an historic occasion either if he did (that's probably the most prevalent abuse of that particular indefinite article).
I do say 'an historic'. But 'a hotel'.
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He might live in an hotel though.

And it would not be an historic occasion either if he did (that's probably the most prevalent abuse of that particular indefinite article).
I do say 'an historic'. But 'a hotel'.

 

I don't mind 'saying', because people have accents.  But written word is 'a historic' because it's not a silent haytch like honour.

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He might live in an hotel though.

And it would not be an historic occasion either if he did (that's probably the most prevalent abuse of that particular indefinite article).
I do say 'an historic'. But 'a hotel'.

I don't mind 'saying', because people have accents. But written word is 'a historic' because it's not a silent haytch like honour.
I beg to differ. I don't say them that way due to my accent, but because it sounds right - in each case.

And I'd write them that way, too.

Edited by mjmooney
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He might live in an hotel though.

And it would not be an historic occasion either if he did (that's probably the most prevalent abuse of that particular indefinite article).
I do say 'an historic'. But 'a hotel'.

 

I don't mind 'saying', because people have accents.  But written word is 'a historic' because it's not a silent haytch like honour.

 

 

It's 'aytch', haytch isn't a letter. 

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Listening to the Beatles back catalogue on a Lithuanian transfer bus between Kaunas and Vilnius being played over the loudspeaker very loud by the Lithuanian driver and my own iPod out of charge . Oh and Saturday afternoon .

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