Can You Use the Article 'The' With 'HOME'? We always say “go home”, “stay home”, “get home”, “come home”, “leave home”, etc. (without “the”) to refer to the place where we live. March 14, 2022 - 2 min read
Articles With Names of Meals Generally, we use no article before the name of meals (breakfast, lunch, and dinner). But there are many exceptions. March 13, 2022 - 2 min read
Articles With Names of Symptoms and Diseases Because most symptom names are countable, they usually require an article (a, an, the) or another determiner to identify or quantify the noun. March 12, 2022 - 5 min read
When to Use the Article 'The' With 'Flu' In everyday English, you can place the article “the” with some traditional folk names of diseases, such as the flu, the measles, or the chicken pox. March 09, 2022 - 2 min read
Do You Need the Article a/an Before ‘Pain’? In many situations, you can use both “pain” or “a pain” to speak about the unpleasant physical sensation caused by injury or illness. March 08, 2022 - 2 min read
Should You Use the Article 'a' Before 'Sore throat'? We always use the article “a” with the expression “have a sore throat”. Avoid the article when using the plural form (sore throats) in a general sense. March 07, 2022 - 2 min read
Is it 'Have a Cold' or 'Have Cold'? It’s “have a cold”. When referring to a mild, very common illness, the noun cold is countable, and its singular form needs an article. March 06, 2022 - 3 min read
'Have a Fever', 'Have Fever', or 'Have a Temperature' In American English, you can use the expression “have a fever” (with the article “a”) to mention a temporary increase in your body temperature. March 05, 2022 - 2 min read
Have an Earache or Have Earache. Which is Correct? In American English, you can use the expression “have an earache” (with the article “an”) when you experience a pain in the inside part of your ear. March 04, 2022 - 2 min read