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Hi !
Doing a paper for a myocardial infarction and when I abbreviate it to MI, is it preceded by A or AN.
When I type it out, I want to write the patient had an MI rather that the patient had a MI.
What is correct??
It is grammatically correct to use the article that belongs to the word. You would say "the patient had a MI", not "an".
I'm sorry, but this is incorrect. We say "a myocardial infraction" because the article refers to a word (myocardial) that sounds with a consonant's sound. We use 'a' or 'an' based on the following sound, so when we say "MI" (pronounced: em eye), we use 'an' because 'em' starts with a vowel sound. Same reason why we say 'an hour' even though 'hour' begins with a consonant.. it's because the first sound pronounced is the 'o'.
It is grammatically correct to use the article that belongs to the word. You would say "the patient had a MI" not "an".[/quote'] Try saying that out loud. Saying "a MI", much like saying "a apple", sounds clumsy because both those words (or abbreviation in the case of MI) start with vowel sounds.
sjalv
897 Posts
"I do that too." Means you also do what has been mentioned.
"I do that, too." Implies you do what has been mentioned alongside previously mentioned things.
So it's the first one