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HaitchElGee 4 points ago +4 / -0

She strikes me as nothing short of a megalomaniac.

(On an unrelated note, it always warms my heart when I see people write 'an' before words beginning with H. So many people don't these days.)

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Zeriel 1 point ago +3 / -2

"An Hysterical" is not correct. You only use an before words where you DON'T pronounce the age. Ex. an hour not where you pronounce it Ex. an helmet

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HaitchElGee 2 points ago +2 / -0

It comes down to whether you pronounce the H of hysterical, and I've heard both variants used depending on accent.

Pearson Longman notes its use is "at the discretion of the speaker or writer. Some people say a historic time, others say an historic time; some say a hotel, others say an hotel; some say a hysterical child, others an hysterical child."

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Zeriel 1 point ago +2 / -1

I think in all those cases you would use an a not an an. Like the rule says if you pronounce the H you cant say an. Unless you pronounce it as "an isterical" instead of "a hysterical" but "an hysterical" doesnt work.

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559throw 2 points ago +2 / -0

Unless you pronounce it as "an isterical"

That's exactly how I pronounce it 🤷‍♂️