Spanish A
That's the difference between the definite and indefinite article. In English we use ' the' when the thing we're talking about is familiar to us. We use ' a' or occasionally ' some' when we're talking about less specific things. Spanish also makes the distinction between definite and indefinite articles, but with an extra twist: They change according to the gender of the noun you're talking about, and how many of them there are. Let's see how it works. Download buku paket fisika kelas 10.
Download program latihan pramuka penggalang. Oleh karena itu pendidikan kepramukaan tidak boleh diserahkan begitu saja kepada orang-orang atau pihak-pihak yang tidak mengerti tentang pendidikan pada umumnya dan keparamukaan pada khususnya, karena hal itu akan menjadikan pendidikan pramuka yang sia-sia dan tidak sesuai dengan harapan Anggaran Dasar dan Anggaran Rumah Tangga Gerakan Kepramukaan Indonesia. Gerakan Kepramukaan adalah suatu bagian dari Organisasi Kepanduan Dunia yang angota-anggotanya dididik menjadi insan yang disiplin, mandiri, bertanggung jawab, berguna bagi sesama umat manusia, serta dapat menjalankan Trisatya dan Dasa Dharma Pramuka.

In English there's a pretty big difference between 'my kid brought the dog home from the park' and 'my kid brought a dog home from the park.' In the first situation you're talking about a specific dog — probably your dog. In the second situation it's just a general, non-specific dog — possibly a stray.


How To Put An Accent On N
How to say 'the' (definite articles) First let's meet the definite articles. Remember these are the equivalents of 'the', and you use them when you're talking about a specific thing, rather than a general kind of thing. (E.g., you're driving the car, vs driving a car.).