>>17423407> It’s a euro. The rule for using a or an is that we use a before a consonant and an before a vowel. But this rule is based on pronunciation, not spelling.Sometimes, as in the case of euro, a word begins with a vowel in the spelling, but with a consonant in the pronunciation. Euro is pronounced you-roh, and y here is a consonant. It therefore takes a – just like other words that begin with a y, like year and yard.
>lolYou are one lonely, awkward, dopey Indian.