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AN or A??????
IS AN!!!!!!
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It's An ffa because of the sounding of the letter is (e-ff)
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hi its an

would You xray for 100$
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It is an. Whoever says it isn't is AN idiot. Bye Its cold in the UK
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Also hi stream can we get a PogChamp spam in chat
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A
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The rlly question is: Where's Mcqueen?
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#AN FFA, NIKOLAI CAN U SAY THIS: HOLA HISPANOS. MEAN HI HISPANICS F**K TRUMP :v
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JUST A QUICK UPDATE FOLKS! ZMCNikolai is 'an' inteligent minem 'an' El O EL
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Typically you'll use 'an' when a word starts with a vowel (a,e,i,u,o) and 'a' when it doesn't.

Ex: an emerald, a diamond sword

However FFA is an acronym so you pronounce the letters separately.

FFA = ef-ef-a

The first letter is an E so you say 'an FFA'.

Similarly you say 'a UHC' (you-haych-cee [or something]) instead of 'an UHC'.
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Its To2 Kappa
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whats with all the random mexicans on this thread
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An free for all, it is an "A," however when you pronounce words per letter for the most part you use "An." Not very good at English but this is my understanding ^^

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The real question is Melk or milk
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It is an "An" 100% if you dissagree then you stupid.
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ZMCNikolai wrote

Hello there, i recently asked my chat, if you say AN FFA, or A FFA, most people agreed with me, and said AN, which i believe is true.
But, there was a few people who, said it was A, now, what do you think? let me know, reply below.


Thank you very much
LG ZMCNikolai


It's "an" because of the pronunciation. You use "an" before words that are spelled with consonants, but are pronounced with vowel sounds. This means because you pronounce it "Eff Eff Ayy", then it would be "an".
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ZMCNikolai wrote

Its AN, any person with 20 braincells or more would know that.


I guess I have 19 brain cells, because it technically means "free for all" so "a free for all". However it does sound a lot better if you just say "an ffa".
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What a waste of time…
Can ya'll grammar?
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A free for all
An FFA
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HalfCreeper wrote

Typically you'll use 'an' when a word starts with a vowel (a,e,i,u,o) and 'a' when it doesn't.

Ex: an emerald, a diamond sword

However FFA is an acronym so you pronounce the letters separately.

FFA = ef-ef-a

The first letter is an E so you say 'an FFA'.

Similarly you say 'a UHC' (you-haych-cee [or something]) instead of 'an UHC'.


Best explanation here and the UHC example makes a lot of sense
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