Shao Feng-Li wrote:Aren't you supposed to use "an" before a vowel?
You use "an" before a word that starts with a vowel
sound, not before all vowels. You use "a" before a word that starts with a consonant sound.
So you sometimes use "an" before a consonant and "a" before a vowel, depending on how they're pronounced. For example, you wouldn't say "This is an useful invention." You would say "a useful" because "useful" starts with a y sound, and y is a consonant (in that instance).
Similarly, it would be "I produced an homage to the Three Stooges." Even though h is a consonant, since it's a silent h that means you're starting off with the "o" sound, making it "an."
A side note on the KJV - while many people know that it dates back to 1611, fewer know that it went through multiple revisions, and the version we actually use today is from a 1724 printing.
Also a fun fact is the original 1611 KJV contained the Deuterocanonical books such as Tobit, 1 and 2 Maccabees, Judith, etc. Even MORE interesting, the 1611 KJV contained three books that were not considered canon by the Council of Trent, 1 and 2 Esdras and Prayer of Manasses (call me immature but that name makes me laugh). It wasn't until the 1666 KJV Bible that all of the Apocryphal books were removed.