searchspell:chemical brotherscorrected for the chemical brothers
The word the functions primarily as a definite article in the grammar of the English language. It is the most common word in the English language.
EtymologyLinguists believe that the common ancestor of the Indo-European languages (Proto-Indo-European) did not have a definite article. Most of the older languages do not have definite or indefinite articles; there is no article in Latin, Sanskrit, or in conservative Indo-European languages like standard Russian, as can often be seen when inexperienced east European natives write in the English language. Classical Greek has a definite article, but Homeric Greek did not. In the etymologies of these and many other languages, the definite article arose by a demonstrative pronoun or adjective changing its usage; compare the fate of the Latin demonstrative ille in the Romance languages, becoming French le, la and les, Spanish el and la, and Italian il and la, among others. The and that are common developments from the same Old English system. Old English had a definite article se, in the masculine gender, seo (feminine), and þæt (neuter). In Middle English these had all merged into þe (þ = th), the ancestor of the Modern English word. Use and pronunciation"The" is generally pronounced with a long e (IPA /i:/) before a word starting with a vowel and with a schwa before a word beginning with a consonant. However, to emphasize the importance or truth of its following word, the is pronounced with long e everywhere, to replace adjectives such as "pre-eminent", as in "the hospital for back problems". But in written expressions, such as "the novelist of middle-class despair", and some spoken contexts (e.g. advertising) it can stand without emphasis since the context is assumed to be clear. For adverbial use it appears twice, each time before a comparative adjective or adverb to denote a commensurate relationship, as in "the more the merrier": this usage derives from Anglo-Saxon þȳ, which is instrumental case and means "by means of the". The word the is common in book and movie titles. Such titles are often listed invertedly, such as Grudge, The, for convenience for people looking for a title. This also happens with the indefinite article a(n). The is the easiest word to type using the Dvorak Simplified Keyboard. Reduction and omissionIn some Northern British dialects of English, the is pronounced as [t] or as a glottal stop, usually written in dialect dialogue as t'; in some dialects it reduces to nothing. This is known as definite article reduction, which see that article for further details. In informal writing, such as notes or diaries, the definite article and some other particles are often omitted, e.g. "Must pick up prescription at pharmacy today." Examples
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