I reckon that "an" is used for verbal convenience, and what sounds contorted
might well be incorrect.
But what's that comma doing there?
Chris
On 7 Jul 2010, at 09:41, Wayne Harridge wrote:
> just read this:
>
> "...the parking lot, is an unique observation tower with..."
>
> I'm wondering if "an unique" is correct, doesn't sound right to me, "an
> excellent" works, but "a unique" seems correct.
>
> I always thought the rule was "an" before a word starting with a vowel, but
> what about "an unique" ?
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