Determiners


A determiner is a word placed before a noun to provide information about quantity, possession, specificity, or definiteness.

Types of Determiners

1. Articles (Show definiteness)

  • Definite Article: The (specific) → The book is on the table.
  • Indefinite Articles: A, An (general) → She bought a pen.

2. Demonstratives (Point out specific things)

  • Examples: This, That, These, Those
  • I like this car. Those flowers are beautiful.

3. Possessive Determiners (Show ownership)

  • Examples: My, Your, His, Her, Its, Our, Their
  • That is my book. Their house is big.

4. Quantifiers (Indicate quantity)

  • Examples: Some, Many, Few, Several, All, Any, No
  • I have some friends. Few people attended the event.

5. Numbers (Show exact amount)

  • Examples: One, Two, Three, First, Second, Third
  • She has two cats. I came in first place.

6. Distributives (Refer to members of a group)

  • Examples: Each, Every, Either, Neither
  • Each student got a prize. Neither answer is correct.

7. Interrogative Determiners (Used in questions)

  • Examples: Which, What, Whose
  • Which dress do you like? Whose book is this?

Conclusion

Determiners give more information about nouns, such as specificity, quantity, possession, and order. They help in clarifying meaning in sentences.

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