You don't. In proper grammar, you use "a" before Europe.
The indefinite article an is shortened to a before words beginning with a consonant sound. European begins with a consonant sound called the y-glide, and so we say a European.
a
It would be a European.
an mp
british do not use any article before hospital. but americons sometimes use article "the" before hospital.
Europe is a place name, a proper noun, it requires no article.
Articles are of two types: Definite article - The Indefinite article - a, an The definite article 'the' is used before a noun to indicate that it is known to the reader or listener. The indefinite article is used to indicate any noun in general or when the identity of the word is not known. It is of two types: a and an. 'a' is used before a word that starts with a consonant or when the word begins with a consonant sound. An is used before vowels or words that begin with a vowels sound. A European s"In this sentence 'An Eupopean (I guess it's a typo) is waiting for my boss in the hall' is incorrect because here the word 'European' begins with a consonant sound, we must use the article 'a' before European. So the correct sentence is a European is waiting for my boss in the hall.
You use the article "a" before a word that starts with a consonant, and you use the article "an" before a word that starts with a vowel. you use an a if there is a vowl after the a. if there is not a vowl after a then it just stays a
why we use an before hotel
I've never seen that kind of article before in a newspaper.
What is Article 37 of the Treaty establishing the European Union?
No. Article the is not used before the name of a person.
Certainly !... The preparation was complete.
Not in English...in French, for example, you would, but not in English.