Determiners
Determiners are a kind of noun
modifier; they precede and are necessarily followed by nouns. While adjectives perform a similar function, the
term ‘determiner’ refers to a relatively limited set of well-established words
that can be said to ‘mark’ nouns.
The function of determiners is to
‘express reference’; i.e. they clarify what a noun is referring to. For example
when one says ‘that box’, the listener knows which box is being referred to.
There are many types of determiners:
- Articles
There are three articles:
a, an, and the.
Indefinite Articles
A and an are indefinite articles that
serve the same purpose, but they cannot be used interchangeably, because ‘a’ is
only used before words that begin with consonants, and ‘an’ is used only before
words that begin with vowels. (Note: ‘an’ before ‘h’ when it is silent, as in
‘hour’ and ‘honour’; ‘a’ before ‘u’ and ‘eu’ when they sound like ‘you’, as in
‘European’ and ‘university’.
The uses of the indefinite article
are as follows:
- To refer to some member of a group, class or
category. For example He is a doctor (profession)/an Indian
(nationality)/a Hindu (religion).
- To refer to a kind of, or example of
something. For example He has a large nose/a thick beard/a strange aunt.
- Preceding singular nouns, with the words
‘what’ and ‘such’. For example What a car! Oh, that’s such a shame!
- To mean ‘one’ object, whether a person or
thing. For example The thieves stole a necklace and a portrait.
- To refer to something that is being mentioned
for the first time. For example There was a chill in the air.
Note:
- We usually say a hundred, a thousand, a
million, etc.
- ‘A’ is not indiscriminately used to refer to
singular objects; ‘one’ is used when emphasis is required. For example
There is only one way out of this mess.
Definite Article
‘The’ is known as the definite
article in English. Its uses are as follows:
- When something is being referred to that has
already been mentioned. For example I saw a pretty girl at the mall today.
The pretty girl did not, however, see me.
- When both parties involved in the conversation
are aware of what is being discussed. For example Where is the restroom?
- To refer to unique objects. For example the
sun, the moon, the Earth, the Taj Mahal.
- With superlatives and ordinal numbers (numbers
used to rank a set of objects). For example Mt Everest is the tallest
mountain on earth, Neil Armstrong was the first man on the moon.
- To refer to groups of people, geographical
areas and oceans, and with decades or groups of years. For example the
Americans, the Sahara/Pacific, the fifties/sixities/seventies/eighties.
- Quantifiers
See article on Quantifiers.
- Demonstratives
This, that, these and those are known
are demonstratives; they describe the position of an object, seen from the
speaker’s viewpoint.
This and these (used for singular and
plural nouns respectively) refer to objects that close by. For example Whose
car is this? Whose cars are these?
That and those (used for singular and
plural nouns respectively) refer to objects that are further away. The
closeness can be physical or psychological. For example Who lives in that
house?
- Numbers
Numbers are cardinal (one, two,
three, etc) and ordinal (first, second, third, etc). Cardinal numbers are
adjectives that indicate quantity (There are fives apples on the table), and
ordinal numbers indicate rank or order (This is the first time for me on a
plane).
- Distributives
The words all, both, half, each,
every, either and neither are known as distributives.
All, Both, Half
These three words can be used in the
following ways:
All +
uncountable noun
Don Bradman is the greatest batsman
of all time.
‘the’ + uncountable noun/countable
noun in plural form
We have all the time in the world.
All the people in the hall went
quiet.
‘my’, ‘your’, etc + uncountable
noun/countable noun in plural form
All my life I have been waiting for
this moment.
All you friends have been invited to
the party.
‘this’, ‘that’ + uncountable
noun/‘these’, ‘those’ + countable noun in plural form
Look at all this dust!
I do not have time for all these
formalities.
Both +
‘the’ /‘my’, ‘your’, etc/‘these’,
‘those’ + countable noun in plural form (note: used only when two objects are
being referred to)
Both the dogs have passed away.
Both my ankles have been hurting
since I jumped from the balcony.
Both these books must be returned
within the week.
Half +
‘a’ + uncountable noun
We bought half a kilo of rice.
‘the’/‘my’, ‘your’, etc/‘this’,
‘that’, ‘these’, ‘those’ + noun
Half the village perished in the
floods.
I spent half my inheritance on
travelling the world.
You may have half (of) this cake.
Only half (of) those points are
relevant.
Each, Every, Either, Neither
See articles.
- Possessives
Possessive pronouns and adjectives
indicate who an object belongs to.
The pronouns are
mine (first person: This car is mine
= I own this car)
yours (second person: This car is
yours = You own this car)
his, hers, and its (third person:
This cars is his/hers = He/she owns this car).
The corresponding adjectives are
my
your
his, her, and it
- Difference words
Other and another are ‘difference
words’; they refer to something different, or remaining, or more. Other is used
with singular and plural nouns, while another is used strictly with singular
nouns.
What other colours can I get this in?
Is there another colour that this is
available in?
- Defining words
Which and whose are ‘defining words’;
they indicate which thing or person is being referred to.
This is the house which I used to
live in as a child.
This is the man whose window you
broke.
- Question words
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