Difference between revisions of "Determiners"

From English Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "Determiners are words or phrases in noun phrases that modify or indicate what entities the noun refers to. For example, a determiner can constrain the meaning of the noun to a...")
 
m
Line 8: Line 8:
 
* '''Distributive determiners''': ''each, any, both''
 
* '''Distributive determiners''': ''each, any, both''
 
* '''Interrogative determiners''': ''which''
 
* '''Interrogative determiners''': ''which''
 +
* '''Noun classifiers''': In East Asian languages, classifiers indicate a semantic class or noun type, e.g., Chinese ''yi ge shitou'' and Korean ''dolmaengi han ge'', where ''ge'' is used in both languages as a noun counter for general nouns that indicates a particular item
 
   
 
   
  

Revision as of 05:51, 1 November 2017

Determiners are words or phrases in noun phrases that modify or indicate what entities the noun refers to. For example, a determiner can constrain the meaning of the noun to a specific or non-specific, known or unknown entity, or a particular number of entities. Determiners include the following types.

  • Demonstratives: this, that, these, those
  • Definite and indefinite delimiters or articles: a, an, the (I prefer to use my own term delimiter instead of article)
  • Possessive determiners: my, your, his,her,its,our, their
  • Quantifiers: many, few, several
  • Numerals: one, two; first, second
  • Distributive determiners: each, any, both
  • Interrogative determiners: which
  • Noun classifiers: In East Asian languages, classifiers indicate a semantic class or noun type, e.g., Chinese yi ge shitou and Korean dolmaengi han ge, where ge is used in both languages as a noun counter for general nouns that indicates a particular item