You used the word "an". The word "an" is only used if the following word starts with a vowel. Otherwise, if the word starts with a consonant, the word "a" must be used. The letter "L" is clearly a consonant.
Hello Xstevey . Actually, you are wrong. For the use of either "an" or "a" before a word does not actually depend on the real first letter in the next word, but how the word is constructed. If the first letter has a phonetic vowel at the beginning (in this case, "L" would be pronounced as "el" ) leading to the need of the word "an" before it.
Hello Ca1, Could you kindly provide another example for I have never heard of this. It is quite possible that I made a mistake there. Thank you for your time.
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