Difference between revisions of "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]]. The following is my own approach to analyzing and teaching delimiters, which comes from my work in cognitive linguistics. | + | 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]]. The following is my own approach to analyzing and teaching delimiters, which comes from my work in cognitive linguistics. I have just begin the process of analyzing and publishing my research, but for now, this work can be referenced by citing the following paper. |
+ | |||
+ | <blockquote> | ||
+ | Lee, Kent. (2018, in press). A “the” or the “a”? L2 learner problems and patterns. ''KOTESOL Journal 13''(2).<ref>Lee, Kent. (2018, in press). A “the” or the “a”? L2 learner problems and patterns. ''KOTESOL Journal 13''(2).</ref> | ||
+ | </blockquote> | ||
+ | |||
==Introduction== | ==Introduction== | ||
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* 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. | * 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. | * Indefinite: Unknown or unfamiliar to the addressee. The speaker assumes the addressee would not be familiar with the item. | ||
+ | |||
==Basic delimiter patterns == | ==Basic delimiter patterns == | ||
+ | A number of nouns can refer to objects or conceptually concrete items in one context (e.g., “a chicken” or “a nanofiber”), but can easily refer to materials or substances in another context (“chicken” as meat, or “nanofiber” as a material). This distinction is not only relevant to everyday contexts (e.g., shopping or eating, where the difference between “chicken” and “a chicken” can be important), but also to academic contexts, where the difference between “nanofiber” material and “a nanofiber” crucially refer to different noun types and referents. It also can change the essential meaning of some nouns, e.g., “tape” (an adhesive material) versus “a tape” (a cassette tape), or “iron” (metal) and “an iron” (a fabric-pressing device, or a golf club). | ||
+ | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="width:75%;" | {| class="wikitable" style="width:75%;" | ||
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==Extended patterns== | ==Extended patterns== | ||
− | The above patterns are extended to more specialized uses and functions. | + | The above patterns are extended to more specialized uses and functions. For example, bare singular nouns can also be used as abstract terms (e.g., “feminism” or “theory”), but they can be made more definite and “countable with the addition of a post-modifier, such as a prepositional phrase, relative clause, or participial phrase. Such post-modified nouns are often marked with the to indicate a specific type, instance, or example of the noun (e.g., “the feminism of the 1960s” or “the special theory of relativity”). However, post-modified noun phrases could be indefinite, being marked with a/an, for descriptive expressions or hypothetical cases (“a theory of gravity”). Bare plurals are essentially used for groups or sets of items (e.g., “buying bananas”), followed by their more abstract generic uses (“lions are wildcats”) for definitions or general descriptions, in contrast to the plus plurals (e.g., “the lions” for a particular set or group of lions). Finally, another specialized use of bare singulars involves nouns would seem countable or definite in their context, but appear with no article (e.g., “going by bus” or “the satellite is in orbit”). The meaning in such bare noun phrases is made more generic or abstract, e.g., emphasizing the general function of the noun rather than a particular object or place (e.g., type of transport, or type of satellite position). |
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{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
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Significantly more material will be added to this page later, along with related pages for teachers and learners. | Significantly more material will be added to this page later, along with related pages for teachers and learners. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==References== | ||
+ | </references> | ||
[[Category:Grammar]] [[Category:Syntax]] | [[Category:Grammar]] [[Category:Syntax]] |
Revision as of 07:51, 10 February 2018
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. The following is my own approach to analyzing and teaching delimiters, which comes from my work in cognitive linguistics. I have just begin the process of analyzing and publishing my research, but for now, this work can be referenced by citing the following paper.
Lee, Kent. (2018, in press). A “the” or the “a”? L2 learner problems and patterns. KOTESOL Journal 13(2).[1]
1 Introduction
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.
2 Basic delimiter patterns
A number of nouns can refer to objects or conceptually concrete items in one context (e.g., “a chicken” or “a nanofiber”), but can easily refer to materials or substances in another context (“chicken” as meat, or “nanofiber” as a material). This distinction is not only relevant to everyday contexts (e.g., shopping or eating, where the difference between “chicken” and “a chicken” can be important), but also to academic contexts, where the difference between “nanofiber” material and “a nanofiber” crucially refer to different noun types and referents. It also can change the essential meaning of some nouns, e.g., “tape” (an adhesive material) versus “a tape” (a cassette tape), or “iron” (metal) and “an iron” (a fabric-pressing device, or a golf club).
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. |
3 Extended patterns
The above patterns are extended to more specialized uses and functions. For example, bare singular nouns can also be used as abstract terms (e.g., “feminism” or “theory”), but they can be made more definite and “countable with the addition of a post-modifier, such as a prepositional phrase, relative clause, or participial phrase. Such post-modified nouns are often marked with the to indicate a specific type, instance, or example of the noun (e.g., “the feminism of the 1960s” or “the special theory of relativity”). However, post-modified noun phrases could be indefinite, being marked with a/an, for descriptive expressions or hypothetical cases (“a theory of gravity”). Bare plurals are essentially used for groups or sets of items (e.g., “buying bananas”), followed by their more abstract generic uses (“lions are wildcats”) for definitions or general descriptions, in contrast to the plus plurals (e.g., “the lions” for a particular set or group of lions). Finally, another specialized use of bare singulars involves nouns would seem countable or definite in their context, but appear with no article (e.g., “going by bus” or “the satellite is in orbit”). The meaning in such bare noun phrases is made more generic or abstract, e.g., emphasizing the general function of the noun rather than a particular object or place (e.g., type of transport, or type of satellite position).
Form | Extended meaning | Examples | |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Singular marked noun (a/an/the) | Material noun → (a) General activity (cf. 2a) |
(a) Beware of theft. We like climbing |
2. | Singular bare noun (Ø) | Object noun → (a) Specific event / instance (cf. 1a)
|
(a) There was a theft. We had a good climb (b) feminism, peace, existence |
3. | Bare plural noun (Ø) | Group / set noun → (a) Generic / category noun |
(a) Penguins are flightless birds. |
4. | Indefinite: a/an + noun | Unknown or unfamiliar → (a) Hypothetical cases / examples / descriptions
|
(a) I want a job that is fun and pays well (b) A cheetah is a wildcat |
5a. | Definite: the + noun | Known / familiar → (a) Physical context
|
(a) You can take the red pill or the blue pill. (b) Open the computer and look at the hard drive. |
5b. | Definite: the + noun | Exemplar usage (a) Exemplar or typical example
|
(a) In the jungle the lion sleeps tonight. (b) I will take the bus. I went to the store / the office |
5c. | Definite: the + noun cf. Indefinite a/an | Post-modifiers as specifiers (a) Specific instance / type, cf.
|
(a) the feminism of the 1960s (b) a theory that explains biodiversity |
6. | Compound noun phrases | Head noun (semantic head) determines article marking | the printing company; the instruction manual; |
Also: → (a) Abbreviations act like compounds; article use depends on head noun of full form
|
(a) the UN (=the...Nations); the CIA (=the...Agency); the the FBI (=the...Bureau); (b) NASA |
Significantly more material will be added to this page later, along with related pages for teachers and learners.
4 References
</references>
- ↑ Lee, Kent. (2018, in press). A “the” or the “a”? L2 learner problems and patterns. KOTESOL Journal 13(2).