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I am struggling with using articles in noun clauses. I have seen some examples where an articles is omitted when the following noun is not even uncountable. For example:

"Tim Courtney, chief investment officer of Exencial Wealth Advisors, said: 'We're stockpiling commodities and demand is not picking up. It's kind of a depressing market.'"

Would it be correct if I write " Time Courtney, a chief investment officer of Exencial Wealth Advisors,..." with an article. I do not believe the word "officer" is uncountable.

Another example to further explain my problem: Mr. Smith, a teacher at Lincoln high school, has a phD degree in math. or Mr. Smith, teacher at Lincoln high school, has a phD degree in math.

Which one is grammatically correct? Or are both acceptable? or they simply carry different meanings.

Please help. Thank you.

CowperKettle
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Tom Lee
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  • Or would it be ok if I write :Tim Courney, the chief investment officer of Exencial Wealth Advisors..." with the word "the"? – Tom Lee Dec 12 '15 at 05:33
  • Related: **[Articles before professions names: “Ms. Smith, public health nurse, was born…”](http://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/75366/articles-before-professions-names-ms-smith-public-health-nurse-was-born)** – CowperKettle Dec 12 '15 at 11:00

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Both are correct.

"Tim Courtney, chief investment officer of ... " sounds more authoritative, since we don't know whether he's the only chief investment officer, or one of the two chief investment officers, etc.

"Tim Courtney, a chief investment officer of ... " lets you know that he's one of many, which right away undermines his authority.

Ricky
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