Delimiters

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Delimiters is an alternative term for articles, as in definite and indefinite articles. This is a term that I have proposed, as I find the term article to be confusing and unhelpful, especially for students. Delimiters or articles belong to the larger syntactic category of determiners. English has the following delimiters.

  • Singular indefinite a and an
  • Singular / plural definite the

Additionally, some functions like a plural indefinite delimiter, as in some apples, referring to a particular quantity of a non-specific set of apples. For nouns with no delimiters, some linguists describe such nouns as a zero article, as in ∅ apples in I like apples. Or the nouns can simply be called bare nouns - nouns not modified by a determiner. We thus have the following basic forms.

  • Marked nouns, i.e, marked with a/an/the
    • Singular indefinites
    • Singular plurals
  • Bare singular nouns
  • Bare plural nouns

We have one key distinction between marked and bare nouns, and another key distinction between definite and indefinite nouns. The definite / indefinite distinction is often not taught clearly; they can be explained to students as follows:

  • Definite: Known or familiar to the addressee (listener/reader). That is, the speaker/writer assumes the addressee would be familiar with the item, for whatever reason. It could be because of linguistic context, physical context, or other factors.
  • Indefinite: Unknown or unfamiliar to the addressee. The speaker assumes the addressee would not be familiar with the item.


Summary of basic article patterns

  Form Meaning Examples
1. Singular marked noun:
a/an/the + singular noun
cf.
Object / item / thing, i.e., physical objects a cup, a coffee, a chicken, the chicken
2. Singular bare noun
(Ø)
Material / substance noun coffee, chicken
3. Bare plural noun
(Ø)
Group / set nouns buying eggs; watching birds
4. Indefinite:
a/an + noun
Unknown or unfamiliar
(to listener / reader )
I don’t have a clue.
5. Definite:
the + noun
Known or familiar
(to listener / reader)
Don’t look at the sun.


Significantly more material will be added to this page later, along with related pages for teachers and learners.