7- ] Grammar American & British .
Chapter Seven .
Determinatives .
Definitions of determiners
The determiner is an important noun modifier which
provides introduces and provides context to a noun, often in terms of quantity
and possession. Determiners in English precede a noun or noun phrase and
include articles, demonstratives, quantifiers and possessives .
A number of a class of words functioning in a noun phrase to
identify or distinguish a referent without describing or modifying it. Examples
of determinatives include articles (a, the), demonstratives (this, those),
cardinal numbers (three, fifty), and indefinite numerals (most, any, each).
Sanghez .(2004:p95) Sanchez , Imma .(2004). “A practical Guide to English Usage.”
Language Service,. University Oberta de Catalunya . She defined a determiners
In Modern English Grammatical Terminology; determiners are considered to be
words that limit or specify the nouns they modify. The most common examples are
articles, demonstratives, possessives, quantifiers and other less easily classified
terms such as all, some and other, which we will refer to as indefinites.
Remember that we have classified the possessives and quantifiers as adjectives
or adverbs for example:
1- The students are distributed into six groups
(a reference to some specific students).
2-Students need another kind of training
(general, unspecific reference).
Ansell
.(2000:p273). Ansell, Mary.(2000). “Free English Grammar.” sistem
Dil Egitim merkezi .She defined determiners as many determiners can be used either as adjective or as pronouns when a determiner is used
adjective modifying a noun , the determiner usually preceded any other
adjectives modifying the same noun for example:
1 - The mouse is eating the cheese .
2 - The mice are eating the cheese .
They defined
determiners ‘are words that can occur directly before a noun, tell us a bit
more about that noun, and introduce it.” The determiners are underlined in the
sentences below, with the following noun in bold for example:
1. I milked The cow .
2. It is Harry’s turn .
3. They bought That house .
4. John has more money .
These sentences have examples of the four major types
of determiners: articles, possessives,
demonstratives, and quantifiers. Generally, a noun
will have only one of these determiner types in front of it , by EVELYN&
ROBERTM.(2010:p45).
Alexander. (1988:p55) Alexander, L. G. (1988).” Longman English Grammar.” New York:
Longman. .He defined determiners as We use a number of words in front of common nouns (or adjective + common noun) which we
call determiners because they affect (or determine') the meaning of the noun.
Determiners make it clear, for ,example, which particular thing(s) we are
referring to or how much of a substance we are talking about . Singular
countable nouns must normally have a determiner in front of them .
Articles give us information about a noun; they
indicate whether or not the noun is a specific one known to both the speaker
and listener .Take a look at these examples to see what we mean:
1. I bought a red car. (The listener doesn’t know
anything about the red car.)
2. The red car was on sale. (The listener knows which
car the speaker is talking
about.)
“The” is commonly called the definite article; “a”
and “an” are called indefinite articles.
The definite article may be used with both singular
and plural nouns, but the indefinite
articles only with singular nouns, as we can see in
the following examples:
1-the idea ,the
ideas
2-an apple /the apple
3-a revolution / the revolutions
Swan .(1996 :P 135) Swan, M. (1996). “Practical
English Usage.” International Student’s Edition. New York:. Oxford University
Press. He defined a determiner in his book Practical English usage as the determiners are words like the, a, my, this, some, either, every enough, several. Determiners come at the beginning of noun phrases, but they are not adjectives.
The moon /this
moon / every week .
A nice day / some problems / enough trouble .
My fat old cat / either arm /several young students .
Foley & Hall(1975:P272) . They defined determiners are words precede noun , articles , demonstratives , quantifiers
and possessive adjectives . Articles can be a problem area in English for
students even at advanced level , especially for those whose own language has a
very different article system for example :
1-Tigers are animals in danger of extinction .
2-The tiger is an animal in danger of extinction .
3-A tiger is an animal in danger of extinction .
But never: * The tigers are animals in danger of
extinction .
Leech &
Svartvik .(1975:p205-206) Leech, G., &
Svartvik, J. (1975). “A Communicative Grammar of English.” Singapore: Longman. They defined determiners are : “words which
specify the range of reference of a noun in various ways, by making it definite
( the boy ), indefinite ( a boy), or by indicating quantity (many boys). The
choice of determiner depends on the type of a common noun. There are three
classes of them, particularly singular count nouns "bottle" ; plural count
nouns" bottles" ; and mass nouns "music" . Proper nouns are
usually used without any 13 determiners . Determiners always stand before the
noun that they determine but the position differs, it is relative to one another.
The category which is most important is that of central determiners, which
includes articles. This category of determiners can be preceded by pre
determiners and followed by post determiners.
Cossé(2005;p120). Cossé .(2005). “My COMMUNICATIVE GRAMMAR STUDY GUIDE .” .
UNIVERSIDAD DE CARABOBO . He defined determiners "specify the range of
reference of a noun in various ways , by making it definite, indefinite, or by
indicating amount or quantity."
Determining Determiners
How should you choose which determiner to use? For
those who were raised speaking the English language, determining the determiner
to use is second-nature, since determiners are so often used in front of nouns
.Like the basic parts of speech, determiners are so ingrained into the English language
that using them is simple. The same goes for most Indo-European languages (for
instance, Romance languages such as Spanish and the Germanic languages such as
German) .However, the languages of other countries may not use determiners, or
may have sets of rules very different than the English language does. For these
individuals, learning how and where to use determine can be rather difficult .
Determiners and Adjectives
Until recently, English teaching in schools did not
take determiners into account. Many determiners were simply lumped into the
category of “adjectives,” which works for some but certainly not for all . Adjectives
have primarily three functions: they modify noun phrases, or complement the
object or subject of a sentence .The function of a determiner is to express
proximity, relationship, quantity, and definiteness .
Determiners are not gradable as are adjectives. For
example, a person may be angry, angrier, or the angriest. A person cannot be
“her-est” or “the-est .Determiners are
usually necessary (or obligatory) in a sentence, whereas adjectives are not . Adjectives,
unlike determiners, cannot have corresponding pronouns . Adjectives and
determiners are distinct from one another and cannot simply be lumped into the same
category.
Function of a Determiner
A determiner can take on a number of different
meanings and roles in a sentence. The determiner is used in every case to
clarify the noun . They may be used to demonstrate or define something or
someone . Quantifiers state how many of a thing , in number or expression. A
determiner is used to show that the noun indicated is a specific one (that
one), not an unspecific one (any) .They may also state the differences between
nouns .
While determiners may have a number of other functions,
most of them are related to these two key areas. The list of determiners only
numbers about 50 words, and all of these words are commonly used by most
individuals. Determiners are not difficult to get the grasp of when contrasted
with adjectives, and do not take too long for native English speakers to grasp.
After all, how many times have you had trouble deciding whether to say “the” or
“a” .
Determiners in English
There are many different determiners in the English
language:
Articles
Articles are among the most common of the
determiners. A, an, and the all express the definiteness and specificity of a
noun
For example, “the” is a definite article, meaning the
person using the word is referring to a specific one. On the other hand, “a” or “an” are indefinite
articles .
The dog is barking too loudly
A student returned the book
Demonstratives
Demonstratives, such as this, that, these and those,
require a frame of reference in which an individual can point out the entities
referred to by a speaker or a writer
Do you want this piece of chicken ?
I don't want to go to that movie .
Quantifiers
Quantifiers, such as all, few, and many, point out
how much or how little of something is being indicated .
He took all the books
Few of the children wanted to go to the zoo
Possessive
When referring to an entity that belongs to another,
you can use possessives. My, your, their, and its are a few examples .
Is this your car .
The dog growled and showed its teeth .
There are many other types of determiners. For
instance, cardinal numbers, the numbers that are written out in English, are
also included in the class of determiners. Determiners are generally split into
two groups—definite determiners and indefinite determiners.
Determiners in English are
Articles
|
Definite ‘the’ / Indefinite ‘a’ / ‘an
|
Demonstratives
|
this , that , these , those
|
Possessives
|
my , your , his , her , its , our , their
|
Quantifiers
|
many , few , both , little , many , etc.
|
Numerals
|
one , two , three , first , second , third , etc.
|
Expressions like
|
whatever , whoever , whichever , etc.
|
Genetive
|
Ali’s car , the boy’s shirt , etc.
|
Classifications of Determiners
Swan
(1996:p147-150). Swan’s classification differs in terms in comparison with
other
authors. The explanations, the rules and the examples
shown in the following part are taken from his grammar book.
Group A determiners are
described as a group which helps to identify things, particularly to say whether
those things are known or unknown to the hearer, whether the reference is to a
particular thing or in general.
Group B determiners comprises
mostly quantifiers, which expresses the amount that it is talked about,. some,
any, no; each, every, either, neither; all, both, half; much, many, more, most,
(a) little, less, least; a few, fewer, fewest; enough; several; what, whatever,
which, whichever; one, two, three. Some of these determiners are used with
singular nouns. each; some with plural ones. many; some with 17 uncountable
nouns. much; and some are used with more than one kind of a noun. which. There
can be used two Group B determiners together providing that the combination
makes sense,. every few days, all six novels, any more coffee .
In their
grammar book A Communicative Grammar of English(1975)Leech and Svartvik devote
one whole chapter to the topic of determiners, where they describe their
classification and use.
The first group discussed are central determiners,
which are divided into six groups. The first group are determiners used with
all three classes of nouns (singular and plural count and mass nouns). This
group comprises the definite article, possessives whose, which(ever),
what(ever) , stressed some and any and no. the pen, my pen, whose gloves, any
pens, no friends. The second group are determiners which are used only with
plural count and mass nouns. This group comprises the zero article, unstressed
some, unstressed any and enough -some apples, any clothes, enough rice. The
third group is composed of determiners which are used only with singular count and
mass nouns, and these are this and that. The fourth group of determiners
connects only with singular count nouns. These are namely a (an), every, each,
either and neither. The fifth group comprises determiners used only with plural
count nouns. These are these and those. The last group are determiners used
only with mass nouns. This group comprises the determiner much only by Leech
& Svartvik (1975:p205 - 370)
Green Baum and Quirk(1990:p70 - 92) . They are the
authors who pay a great deal of
attention to the grammar of determiners. In their
grammar book " A Student’s Grammar of the English Language (1990) ", there is a
section where it is possible to find the classification and all the rules
concerning determiners, especially articles, the rules of which are most
numerous .In their grammar book, we can also find a brief part which is
separate from the rest where determiners are discussed in connection with
pro-forms and ellipsis.
Determiners accompany noun phrases. Determiners are
divided into three classes based on their position in the noun phrase, namely
central determiners, pre determiners and post determiners. The use of
determiners is also dependent on the type of a noun .“The distinction between
concrete and abstract nouns is important semantically. However, whether the
noun is countable or uncountable, or proper or common is
important for the use of determiners.
The first and the largest class discussed in this
grammar book are central determiners. This group of determiners comprises
articles, particularly the definite article the, the indefinite article a and
the zero article, then demonstratives, possessives, wh-determiners, the
negative determiner no, universal determiners, the non-assertive dual
determiner either, the negative dual determiner neither, the general assertive
determiner some, the general non-assertive determiner any and the quantitative
determiner enough. The correct use of articles is dependent on the class concerning the number of the noun, there is a system how to use articles. With
singular nouns, the definite article is used with both countable and
uncountable nouns ,and the indefinite article is used with countable nouns
.Singular uncountable nouns expressing indefiniteness are used with the zero article.
Definite plural nouns are used with the definite article and indefinite plural
nouns are used with the zero article. The zero article is together
with 'a', which is used with singular count nouns, counted as an indefinite
article and it is analogous to 'a' with non count and plural count nouns. One of
the other types of central determiners are demonstratives, which can be used
with singular count, plural count and non count nouns. Another type of central
determiners are possessives, namely my, our, your, his, her, its, their, Other
central determiners are wh-determiners which, whose, whichever, whatever,
whosever , which can be used as relatives, indefinite relatives
or interrogatives. Other types of determiners are used only with singular count
nouns, particularly the universal
determiners every and each. Those central determiners
occur only with non count nouns, the general assertive determiner some , the
general non-assertive determiner any, and the quantitative determiner enough. The
second class which is described in the grammar book are pre determiners
.According to Green Baum and Quirk, pre-determiners are mutually exclusive.
They stand immediately before central determiners and are divided into two
subgroups. The first one is composed of all, both and half and the second one
are multipliers. The last group discussed in this grammar book are
post determiners. They stand immediately after central determiners. But when
there is no central determiner, the distinction is neutralized. Post determiners are divided into two classes:
ordinals and quantifiers.
Alexander(1988:p55-70) . In Alexander’s grammar book
Longman English Grammar (1988), "there is
only a brief classification of determiners. In order to understand Alexander’s
classification of determiners ".
According to Alexander (1988), determiners are words
which are used in front of common
nouns and which have an influence on the meaning of
the noun. They clarify the amount of the substance or which thing is talked
about. There can also be an adjective in front of the noun instead of a
determiner . The first article the particular rules of which are discussed in
the grammar book of Alexander is the indefinite article a/an. It is used only
with singular nouns to classify or identify, or to express quantity. With
plural nouns the zero article is used to classify/identify and some is used to
express the quantity. The second use of article the particular rules of which
are discussed is the definite article 'the'. It “never varies in form whether it
refers to people or things, singular or plural” so it does not differ in form
but it does in pronunciation. There are two different ways how to pronounce 'the'. The first one /ðə/ is before consonant sounds and the second one /ði:/ is
in front of vowel sounds. The second type of pronunciation of 'the' is also used
to emphasize the noun which follows the article.
A large
section of Alexander’s grammar is devoted to the zero article. Even though
there is no article, it got the name owing to its frequency, so it should not
be regarded as the use of no article but as the use of the 'zero article' .There are three basic types of uses of the zero
article. It is used with three types of nouns, namely plural countable nouns,
uncountable nouns and proper nouns. But they can occur before countable nouns
and uncountable nouns to talk about specific items as well as before names in
specific cases .
e.g. The Chicago of the 1920s was a terrifying place.
Huddleston (1984:p233 -236), determiners are
closed-class words such as the, a, some, any,
etc., or expressions such as a few, my uncle’s, how
much, etc. A noun phrase can contain from none to even three determiners, e.g.
ideas, his ideas, his many ideas, all his ideas and all her many ideas. If
there is more than one determiner, the order is fixed . Thus three positions of
determiners have to be distinguished for the sake of the easier understanding
of Huddleston’s classification of determiners,
the following figure is presented.
1 ( Predeterminers ) : all , both , half , etc.
the ,
this , these , etc.
Determiners 11 ( Central determiners
) we , us , you , etc.
111 (
Postdeterminers ) every ,
many , several , etc.
Classification of determiners by Huddleston
Huddleston labels these positions only as I, II and
III. He shows an example of the noun
phrase. At the beginning there are determiners in
order I, II, III, then there is a modifier and a head. Then he classifies
particular words belonging to the groups of determiners. Group I contains words
such as all, both, half, one-third, three-quarters, double, twice, such, what,
etc. Group II contains i) the, this, these, that, those, then ii) we, us, you,
etc.; and iii) which, what, a, another, some, any, no, either, neither, each,
enough, much, more, most, less, a few, a little. Group III includes words such as
every, many, several, few, little, one, two, three, etc.
Functions of Determiners
Brinton & donna (2010:p210) . A determiner phrase
is a phrase in which at least one
determiner functions as the head of the phrase plus
any additional determiners or p-words
functioning as particles. The two grammatical forms
that appear within the internal structure of English determiner phrases are:
1- Determiners
2-P-words
Determiner phrases may consist of two or more
determiners plus a p-word. Determiner phrases perform the grammatical function
of determinative.
Forms of Determiner Phrases
The first form of determiner phrase is the determiner
phrase consisting of two determiners. For example
all six astronauts (quantifier + numeral)
all the frogs (quantifier + article)
the two children (article + numeral)
these 24 sodas (demonstrative determiner + numeral)
the many obstacles (article + quantifier)
her many problems (possessive determiner +
quantifier)
which four books (interrogative determiner + numeral
whose three socks (possessive interrogative
determiner + numeral)
The second form of determiner phrase is the
determiner phrase consisting two determiners and a P-word For example:
many of the counties (quantifier + p-word + article)
all of her knitting (quantifier + p-word + possessive
determiner)
two of a kind (numeral + p-word + article)
seven of his grandchildren (numeral + p-word +
possessive determiner)
The third form of determiner phrase is the determiner
phrase consisting of three determiners. For example
all her many accomplishments (quantifier + possessive
determiner + quantifier)
all the many layers (quantifier + article +
quantifier)
all these many difficulties (quantifier +
demonstrative determiner + quantifier)
The fourth form of determiner phrase is the
determiner phrase consisting of three determiners and a P-word.
For example:
all of the twenty soldier (quantifier + p-word +
article + numeral)
half of her thirty-two relatives (quantifier + p-word
+ possessive determiner + numeral)
some of these 75 choices (quantifier + p-word +
demonstrative determiner + numeral)
nine of those dozen cookies (numeral + p-word +
demonstrative determiner + quantifier)
Other combinations of determiners and p-words are
also possible in forming determiner phrases in English.
A large
section of Alexander’s grammar is devoted to the zero article. Even though
there is no article, it got the name owing to its frequency, so it should not
be regarded as the use of no article but as the use of the zero article. There are three basic types of uses of the zero
article. It is used with three types of nouns, namely plural countable nouns,
uncountable nouns and proper nouns. But they can occur before countable nouns
and uncountable nouns to talk about specific items as well as before names in
specific cases .
e.g. The Chicago of the 1920s was a terrifying place.
Huddleston (1984:p233 -236), determiners are
closed-class words such as the, a, some, any,
etc., or expressions such as a few, my uncle’s, how
much, etc. A noun phrase can contain from none to even three determiners, e.g.
ideas, his ideas, his many ideas, all his ideas and all her many ideas. If
there is more than one determiner, the order is fixed . Thus three positions of
determiners have to be distinguished for the sake of the easier understanding
of Huddleston’s classification of determiners,
the following figure is presented.
Articles belong to a closed class of words call
determiners. Determiners provide information such as familiarity, location,
quantity, and number about a noun, pronoun (rarely), or noun phrase. Articles
specify the grammatical definiteness of a noun or noun phrase. The definite
article in English is the. The indefinite articles in English are a and an.
Definite articles express definiteness ,or that the noun or noun phrase is
uniquely specified or known. Indefinite articles expressing definiteness, or
that the noun or noun phrase is general or unknown. In addition to definite and
indefinite articles, some grammars also list negative articles and the zero article
as articles in the English language. The negative article in English is no,
which is also sometimes considered a quantifier. The zero article (Ø) is a lack
of an article. In grammar, a determinative is a word or phrase that expresses
additional information such as definiteness, proximity, quantity, and
relationships about a noun phrase and that differs from an adjective phrase,
which describes attributes. In the English language, articles frequently
function as determinatives . Examples: of articles as determinatives include
the following
1-A little boy brought me an egg. (indefinite
article, indefinite article)
2-An apple a day keeps the doctor away. (indefinite
article, indefinite article, definite article)
3-The roof on the house needs a good cleaning.
(definite article, definite article, indefinite article)
4-No woman wants a man with no ambition. (negative
article, indefinite article, negative article)
5-No man can learn every language. (negative article)
6-The vet can find no dog named Rex in the record
book. (definite article, negative article, definite article
7-Ø Children
like to look at the lions at the zoo. (zero article, definite article, definite
article)
8-Ø Bears eat Ø berries in the woods. (zero article,
zero article, definite article)
Huddleston (1984:p233 -236). Belonging to a closed
class of words, determiners provide
information such as familiarity, location, quantity,
and number about a noun or noun phrase. Determiners differ in form and function
from adjectives, which describe attributes of nouns and noun phrases. Similar to
quantifiers, numerals are counting numbers such as one, two, three, and four
that provide information about the amount of a word or phrase. Some grammars
consider numerals as a subcategory of quantifiers.
Using Numerals
Like other determiners, numerals perform the
grammatical function of determinative. Numerals indicate the number of quantity
of another word or phrase. For example:
1-Two birds ate four cherries
2-I have one child
3-The merchant sold seven ripe yellow bananas
4-The choir consists of 153 tone-deaf singing nuns
Numerals may appear within determiner phrases.
For
example
1-Six of the children failed the exam
2-She enjoyed all four of the movies
3-Pick out any three books
4-We washed some of the 20 windows
Numerals are counting numbers such as one, two,
three, and four that provide information about the amount of a word or phrase.
Interrogative determiners ask questions about unknown
nouns and noun phrases. The interrogative determiners in English are what and
which. The possessive determiner whose, or possessive interrogative determiner,
is also an interrogative determiner. Do not confuse the interrogative determiners
with some of the interrogative pronouns or relative pronouns, which are similar
in form but different in function.
In grammar, a determinative is a word or phrase that
expresses additional information such as definiteness, proximity, quantity, and
relationships about a noun phrase and that differs from an adjective phrase,
which describes attributes. In the English language, interrogative determiners frequently
function as determinatives. Examples of interrogative determiners as
determinatives include the following:
1-What movie do you want to watch tonight?
2-What book are you reading for class?
3-Which soup do you want with your entrée?
4-He was accepted into which college?
5-Whose hat is this?
6-You crashed into whose fence?
Hopper,(1999:p157). Paul J . Hopper .(1999). ‘A Short Course in Grammar
. : Cambridge
University Press . Determiners differ in form and
function from adjectives, which describe attributes of nouns and noun phrases.
Quantifiers provide information about quantity of another word or phrase. Some
of the most common English quantifiers include the following: (All ,any ,both
,each ,either ,enough ,every ,few ,fewer ,less ,many ,more ,most ,neither ,no
,several and some) Many quantifiers appear within determine phrases that
contain the p-word of functioning as a particle. For example (all of ,few of
,many of ,most of ,none of ,plenty of and some of )Multipliers such as twice,
double, and second and fractions such as one-third and half are also quantifiers.
Some grammars consider numerals, or counting numbers, as a subcategory of quantifiers.
Some grammars also categorize the determiner no as a negative article .
Using Quantifiers
Like other determiners, quantifiers perform the
grammatical function of determinative. Quantifiers indicate the quantity of
another word or phrase. For example
1-Many students failed to finish the exam
2-She wants fewer rolls and more biscuits
3-All of the branches broke off the tree
4-The second film was better than the first.
5-Half the apples fell into the creek.
6-Neither foot hurts much anymore.
Quantifiers are determiners that provide information
about the quantity of another word or phrase.
Common kinds of determiners include definite and
indefinite articles (like the English the and a or an), demonstratives (this
and that), possessive determiners (my and their), cardinal numerals,
quantifiers (many, all and no), distributive determiners (each, any), and
interrogative determiners (which).
Determiners include articles (a, an, the), cardinal
numbers (one, two, three...) and ordinal numbers (first, second, third...),
demonstratives (this, that, these, those), partitives (some of, piece of, and
others), quantifiers (most, all, and others), difference words (other,
another), and possessive determiners (my,
There are four different types of determiners in
English: articles, demonstratives, quantifiers, and possessives.
To sum up, determiners are used to express a close
relationship, or a quantity, closeness or definiteness. Determiners are also
used to demonstrate something or define someone, besides stating differences
between nouns. It may be noted that determiners should not be confused with
adjectives as there are several differences. For instance, determiners are
almost always required in a sentence whereas adjectives are not. Determiners
are not gradable whereas adjectives are.
Generally such determiners, also known as
quantifiers, can be classified into three categories, like so:
The first category, comprising A, ALL, AN, ANOTHER,
EVERY, BOTH, EACH, EITHER, FEW, MANY, SEVERAL, MOST, NEITHER, NO and ANY, can
be used with countable nouns only. In this category we can add all the numbers.
For instance, we can say ‘FOUR STUDENTS were selected for the school cricket
team’ but we cannot say ‘My father gave me FOUR MONIES’. Here ‘student’ is a
countable noun whereas ‘money’ is an uncountable noun.
The second category, comprising ENOUGH, LITTLE, MORE,
SOME and MUCH, can be used with uncountable nouns only. For instance, in the
example above we could say ‘My father gave me SOME MONEY’ or ‘He lost MUCH
BLOOD when he hurt himself falling down from the cycle’. Here both ‘money' and
'blood’ are uncountable nouns.
The third category, comprising ALL, SOME, MOST, MORE,
ENOUGH, NO and ANY, can be used with both countable and uncountable nouns. For
instance, we can say ‘SOME TABLES were broken in the hailstorm’ and ‘Pass me
SOME WATER please’ and here SOME is a determiner which can be used by both
countable (table) and uncountable (water) nouns.
It takes some practice to use the correct determiners
and the trick is to learn about the context of the sentence and identify the
nouns and the appropriate determiners to use.
Certain classes of words are
grouped under the term determinatives . Their uses are discussed more fully
elsewhere .
1- ] Articles ‘a’ , ‘an’ , ‘the’ .
2-] Adjectives of quantity ; 1- ] all
the cardinal numbers ( one – two three ,
etc. ) 2- ] all , some , several , any , much , many (a) few , (a) little , no
, enough , etc.
3-] Distributive adjectives : each
, every , both , neither , either .
4- ] Interrogative adjectives :
which , what , whose .
5- ] Demonstrative adjectives :
this , that , these , those .
6- ] Possessive adjectives : my ,
your , his , her , its , their , our .
7- ] Nouns and noun-phrases in the
possessive case : Ali’s book , the man’s shirt , an old woman’s face .
Many of these words may stand
alone as pronouns , or may qualify nouns . When they qualify nouns , they
differ from qualificative adjectives ( big , red , intelligent , active , etc.
) in two important respects .
A- ] Word Order : They are
always placed before any qualifying adjectives .
Examples
the red shirt / this old house /
my new brown coat .
B- ]Distribution : 1- ] One
of the appropriate determinatives must always be used before a singular
countable noun ( indefinite article ‘a’ , ‘an’ ) . 2- ] An appropriate
determinative may be used before uncountable nouns and plural countable nouns ,
but is not always needed in these cases . Except for the combinations shown
below , only one determinative can be used before a noun .
Determinatives are used before : 1- ] singular countable nouns . 2- ] plural countable
nouns .
3- ] uncountable nouns .
Determiners with countable and
uncountable nouns (SOME, ANY, NO, MANY, MUCH, FEW, LITTLE etc.)
Determiners precede nouns and show
what kind of reference the noun has. Some determiners can only be used with countable
or uncountable nouns, while others can be used with both. Countable nouns take
a singular or plural form depending on the determiner which precedes them:
Singular countable nouns Plural countable nouns Uncountable nouns
A, AN, THE
A man and a woman came in.
I heard an interesting story at
the office yesterday. THE, zero article
The apples were peeled and quartered.
Mondays are always busy here.
THE, zero article
She jumped into the water.
A magnet attracts iron.
THIS, THAT
This film was good.
I like that shirt. THIS,
THAT
Where did you buy this wine?
That cheese smells delicious.
THESE,
THOSE
Can I try on these jeans?
How do you like those cherries?
SOME, ANY, NO
I was just talking to some guy
from school.
Any sensible person would have
done the same.
I am no scientist. SOME, ANY, NO
I have some problems.
I don't have any problems.
I have no problems. SOME, ANY, NO
I have some time.
I don't have any time.
I have no time.
EVERY
Every cloud has a silver lining.
FEW,
A FEW, FEWER, THE FEWEST
There were few people at the
concert. (not many)
There were a few people at the
concert. (some)
We had fewer computers a year ago.
This medicine has the fewest side
effects. LITTLE, A LITTLE, LESS,
THE LEAST
There is little hope that he will
survive. (not much)
There is a little hope that he
will survive. (some)
Tim should spend less time on the
computer.
This medicine does the least harm.
MANY,
MORE, (THE) MOST, MOST OF THE
There were not many people at the
concert. (few)
More people came to the concert
than expected.
Most mammals live on land.
Tom got the most votes.
Most of the visitors were art
students. MUCH, MORE, (THE) MOST, MOST OF
THE
There is not much hope that he
will survive. (little)
There is more hope that he will
survive.
Most furniture is made of wood.
Which candy bar has the most sugar
in it?
Most of the time I'm not at home.
A
LOT OF, LOTS OF, PLENTY OF
There are a lot of tables and
chairs in the room.
There are lots of tables and
chairs in the room.
There are plenty of tables and
chairs in the room. A LOT OF, LOTS
OF, PLENTY OF
We have a lot of space in the car.
We have lots of space in the car.
We have plenty of space in the
car.
A
NUMBER OF
A number of questions arose at the
meeting. AN AMOUNT OF
The word budget means an amount of
money we have available to spend.
ANOTHER, THE OTHER
Can you think of another example?
I'd prefer the other car.
OTHER, THE OTHER
Other boys would have done the
same.
The other students went home. OTHER, THE OTHER
Is there other software available?
The other news is that they are
getting married in June.
ENOUGH
Do you have enough pens for
everyone? ENOUGH
Is there enough milk in the
fridge?
ALL,
ALL THE
All students must take a placement
test at the beginning of the course.
I couldn't answer all the
questions. ALL, ALL THE
Not all coffee is bitter.
The robber took all the money.
BOTH
Both sides wanted peace.
NEITHER, EITHER
Neither player has won the game.
You can choose either way.
NONE
OF THE
Luckily, none of the soldiers were
killed. NONE OF THE
None of the music they played attracted
me.
EACH
Each question carries one mark.
◂ Nouns with countable and uncountable meanings▴
Countable and uncountable nouns Partitive
expressions with uncountable nouns ▸
Notes On Some Determinatives .
Much / Many
1- ] Much is used with uncountable
( singular ) nouns .
Examples
You haven’t much time if you want
to catch that train .
I do not have very much money .
I do not want much sugar in my tea
.
2- ] Many is used with plural
countable nouns .
Examples
You haven’t many minutes to spare
if you want to catch that train .
Hoe many apples do you like ?
Note :
The only occasion when many is
used with a singular noun is in the phrase many a .
Examples
Many a ship has ( = many ships
have ) been wrecked on these rocks .
Many a man would be glad of your
job .
I have been there many a time . (
= many times )
3- ] Much and many are most
frequently used in negative or interrogative
sentences ; much with singular uncountable nouns , many with plural nouns .
Examples
I haven’t much time .
Did you have much rain on your
holidays ?
There is not much sugar in the
sugar bowl .
Do you know many people in Cairo ?
There are not many mistakes in
your exercise .
4- ] Much and many are usually
preferred even in affirmative constructions . In the colloquial use in
affirmative statements ‘much’ and ‘many’ are frequently replaced by ‘a lot of’
, ‘lots of’ , ‘a large quantity of’ , ‘plenty of’ , ‘a good deal of’ .
Examples
He will have a lot of time to
spare when he has finished the he is working on .
She knows lots of people in London
.
He has done a good deal of
research on that subject .
Note :
With ‘a lot of ’ and ‘ plenty of ’
the verb is singular with uncountable nouns , plural with countable nouns .
Examples
There is plenty of sugar in the
sugar bowl .
There are plenty of chairs for
everyone .
5- ] ‘Much’ and ‘many’ are used in
indirect questions introduced by whether or if .
Examples
I doubt whether there will be much
time for seeing the sights of London ; your train leaves at six o’clock .
I wonder if many people will be at
the party .
6- ] ‘Much’ and ‘many’ are used
when preceded by ‘so’ , ‘too’ , ‘as’ , ‘how’ .
Examples
He has so much money and I have so
little .
There are too many mistakes in
your exercise .
He has drunk too much wine and
ought not to drive his car home .
You can have as much juice ( as
many glasses of juice ) as you want .
I know how much money ( how many
dollars ) that ring cost .
7- ] ‘Much’ and ‘many’ are used
when they qualify the subject of the sentence .
Examples
Many hands make light work .
Proverb
Many Englishmen like to spend
their spare time working in their gardens .
Much time would be saved if you
planned your work properly .
8- ] Much stands alone ( i.e. with
no noun ) .
Examples
Much depends on what answer the
Prime Minister gives to that question .
I would give much to know what he
is thinking now .
Much of what he says is true .
Much as I should like to come ,
I’m afraid I must refuse .
9- ] Much is followed by an
abstract noun , especially when the noun is preceded by an adjective .
Example
The book is the fruit of much
patient research .
Few , Little .
1- ] - Bothe ‘few’ and ‘little’
have a negative implication .
- Few contrasted with many is used
with plural countable nouns .
Examples
The few friends that he had are all dead .
Few people would agree with you .
- Little ( as a determinative and
contrasted with much ) is used with singular uncountable nouns . Little has the
meaning ‘not much’ , and the emphasis is on the scantiness .
Examples
The little money that he has will
hardly keep him in food .
The shipwrecked sailors had no food and little water .
2- ] ‘ A few ’ , and ‘ a little ’ have a positive implication .
They mean ‘ some ’ , though not many ( much ) .
Examples
He has a few friends who call to see him quite frequently .
A few people would agree with you .
He has a little money and can live quite comfortably on it .
The shipwrecked sailors had a little water .
Exercise
Complete the following sentences by inserting in each a word chosen
from the following : all the words can be used .
something , someone , somebody , nothing , nobody , everything ,
everybody , anything , anyone , anybody .
1- ] There is -------------- strange in his behavior today .
2- ] Is there --------------- specially interesting in the paper
this morning ?
3- ] No there’s ------------------ startling .
4- ] There is --------------- very outstanding in English in my
class .
5- ] ---------------- valuable was taken by the burglars .
6- ] --------------------- well-known in the theater attended that
first night .
7- ] I’m sure -------------------- cleverer than he will get the
prize .
8- ] Was there ------------------- specially well dressed at the
dance last night ?
9- ] ----------------------- interested in the subject is invited
to attend the lecture .
10- ] There must be ----------------- clever to solve this problem
.
Exercise
.
Insert ‘rather’ or ‘quite’ in the correct position in these
sentences .
1- ] He can do difficult exercises correctly .
2- ] This is a valuable violin though it is certainly not a
Stradivarius .
3- ] They are not very generous people ; in fact they are mean .
4- ] He was not clever enough to pass his exam , though he worried
very hard .
5- ] She is an unhealthy-looking girl . I don’t think she gets
enough exercise . [ use both words in this sentence ]
Exercise
Use expressions chosen from the following list to complete these
sentences ;
few , a few , little , a little , the little
1- ] ‘Is there any tea left in the pot ?’ ‘Yes , -------------.’
2- ] ‘Do you smoke at all ?’ ‘Yes , but very ---------------‘.
3- ] ‘Do you smoke at all ?’ yes …………..’ .
4- ] Our driver had had --------------- drinks and wasn’t fit to
take the wheel .
5- ] Having had ------------------ opportunities to practice , I
did not play the piece as well as I might have done .
6- ] Having had ---------------- opportunities to practice , I
played the piece reasonably well .
7- ] He is a lonely man , he has ---------------- friends .
8- ] I have only -------------coal in my cellar because the coal
man has not come .
9- ] We must save -------------- money we have left for our journey
home .
10- ] He always has ------------------ in reserve for emergencies .
11- ] Can you come to our house this evening ? I am inviting
------------- friends for coffee .