Friday, September 30, 2016
The Sound of 1,100
The movie "Wild" was listed in a broadcast schedule and described thus: "A lone woman undertakes an 1,100 mile hike."
Why use “an” when there are numerals afterwards? If you say it as I did, "one thousand one hundred." then the sound [wuh] for "one" is there, a consonant sound; so "an" wouldn't apply. The article is "a."
Perhaps they figured it would be said, “an eleven hundred mile hike. ” But there's that comma.
It depends on the sound that follows. Maybe they thought, "It begins with the numeral 1--treat it like language spelled 'o,' 'n,' 'e,' and since 'o' is a vowel, we'll use 'an' to make it sound right."
Except the letter "o" isn't what's operative! It's the sound of the word "one," which begins [wuh], exactly as in the word "won."
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