Monday, November 25, 2019
Definition and Examples of Determiners in English
Definition and Examples of Determiners in English          In Englishà  grammar, a determiner is a word or a group of words that specifies, identifies, or quantifies the nounà  or noun phraseà  that follows it. It is also known as aà  prenominal modifier. Basically, determiners come at the start of a noun phrase and tell more about what comes after it (or them, in the case of a phrase that has more than one determiner before the noun).         Determiners include articlesà  (a, an, the),à  cardinal numbers (one, two, three...) and ordinal numbers (first, second, third...), demonstrativesà  (this, that, these, those),à  partitivesà  (some of, piece of, and others),à  quantifiersà  (most, all, and others), difference words (other, another), and possessive determinersà  (my, your, his, her, its, our,à  their).         Authors Martha Kolln and Robert Funk describe them this way: Determiners signal nouns in a variety of ways: They may define the relationship of the noun to the speaker or listener (or reader); they may identify the noun asà  specificà  orà  general; they mayà  quantifyà  it specifically or refer to quantity in general. (Understanding English Grammar,à  5th ed. Allyn and Bacon, 1998)          A Slippery Grammatical Label      Determiners are functional elements of structure and not formalà  word classes, because the group of words contains some items that are nouns, some that are pronouns, and some that are adjectives. Authors Sylvia Chalker and Edmund Weiner explain: Determinersà  are sometimes calledà  limiting adjectivesà  inà  traditional grammar. However, they not only differ from the class ofà  adjectivesà  byà  meaning,à  but also must normally precede ordinary adjectives inà  noun phraseà  structure. Further, among determinersà  themselvesà  there are co-occurrence restrictions and fairly strict rules ofà  word order. (Oxford Dictionary of English Grammar. Oxford University Press, 1994)          Rules on Multiple Determiners      English has rules on word order, such as when there are multiple adjectives in a row modifying the same noun (quantity before age, before color, for example). The same goes for when you use multiple determiners in a row.à           When there is more than one determiner, follow these useful rules:a) Place all and both in front of other determiners.E.g. We ate all the food. Both my sons are at college.b) Place what and such in front of a and an in exclamations.E.g. What an awful day! Ive never seen such a crowd!c) Place many, much, more, most, few, little after other determiners.E.g. His many successes made him famous. They have no more food. What little money I have is yours.ââ¬â¹Ã           (Geoffrey N. Leech, Benita Cruickshank, and Roz Ivanià , An A-Z of English Grammar  Usage, 2nd ed. Longman, 2001)          Count and Noncount Nouns      Some determiners work with count nouns, and some dont. For example,à  manyà  attachesà  to count nouns, such as The child hadà  manyà  marbles. In contrast, you would not useà  muchà  to attach to count nouns such asà  marblesà  but noncount nouns such asà  work,à  for example in, The college student hadà  muchà  work to finish before finals week. Other determiners work with either one, such as all: The child hadà  allà  the marbles and The college student hadà  all theà  work to finish before finals week.    
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