Difference between revisions of "Determiner"

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A '''determiner''' is a member of a [[word class]] of great importance to fluent idiomatic English.  Non-native speakers find some aspects of this group among the hardest aspects of English usage to learn.  They are divided into three categories, which must occur in this order: '''<u>pre</u>determiners''', '''<u>central</u> determiners''' and '''<u>post</u>determiners'''.
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A '''determiner''' is a member of a [[word class]] of great importance to fluent idiomatic English.  Non-native speakers find some aspects of this group among the hardest aspects of English usage to learn.  They are divided into three categories, which must occur in this order: '''<u>pre</u>determiners''', '''<u>central</u> determiners''' and '''<u>post</u>determiners'''. The most important are the central determiners.
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*'''Central determiners''' include the [[article]]s.  The [[possessive pronoun]]s, and such words as 'this', 'that', 'every', 'each' and the negatives 'no' and 'neither' are also central determiners.  A [[noun phrase]] can have only one of these '''central determiners'''.
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*'''Predeterminers''', of which a noun phrase can only have one, include numerical words like 'all', 'both' and 'half', as well as fractions like 'one-third (of)' and multipliers like 'double'.
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*'''Postdeterminers''' include numerals, both [[ordinal]] and [[cardinal]], and some others. 
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[[category:grammar]][[category:grammar course]][[category:word classes]]

Revision as of 18:07, 9 April 2007

A determiner is a member of a word class of great importance to fluent idiomatic English. Non-native speakers find some aspects of this group among the hardest aspects of English usage to learn. They are divided into three categories, which must occur in this order: predeterminers, central determiners and postdeterminers. The most important are the central determiners.

  • Central determiners include the articles. The possessive pronouns, and such words as 'this', 'that', 'every', 'each' and the negatives 'no' and 'neither' are also central determiners. A noun phrase can have only one of these central determiners.
  • Predeterminers, of which a noun phrase can only have one, include numerical words like 'all', 'both' and 'half', as well as fractions like 'one-third (of)' and multipliers like 'double'.
  • Postdeterminers include numerals, both ordinal and cardinal, and some others.