Determiner: Definition, Types, List and Useful Examples of Determiners
Determiner: Definition, Types, List and Useful Examples of Determiners
Table of Contents
What Is a Determiner?
Types of Determiners
o Definite Determiners
o Indefinite Determiners
o Quantifiers
o Personal Determiners
o Other Cases
o Zero Determiners
What Is a Determiner?
What is a determiner? Learn different types of determiners in English with
meaning, list and example sentences.
Types of Determiners
The following is a rough classification of determiners used in English, including
both words and phrases:
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What Is a Determiner?
Definite Determiners
Which imply that the referent of the resulting noun phrase is defined
specifically:
3. Possessive adjectives
Examples: my, your, his, her, its, our, their, whose, one’s, everybody’s, Cindy’s,
Linda’s, a boy’s, the man we saw yesterday’s.
4. Interrogatives
Examples: which, what (these can be followed by -ever for emphasis).
Indefinite Determiners
1. The indefinite article
Example: a or an
2. The word some
Used as an equivalent of the indefinite article with plural and non-count
nouns.
4. The word any
Often used in negative and interrogative contexts in place of the article
-equivalent some (and sometimes also with singular count nouns). It can also
be used to express alternative.
Quantifiers
1. Words indicating a large or small quantity and their comparative and
superlative forms
Examples: much/many, little/few, more, most, less/fewer, least/fewest.
4. Cardinal numbers
Examples: zero (quite rare as determiner), one, two, etc.
5. Other phrases expressing precise quantity
Examples: a pair of, five liters of, etc.
Personal Determiners
The words you and we/us, in phrases like we teachers; you guys can be
analysed as determiners.
Examples:
I thought you guys all wore those penguin coats.
Us girls wear woolen socks in winter.
These examples can be contrasted with a similar but different use of pronouns
in an appositional construction, where the use of other pronouns is also
permitted but the pronouns cannot be preceded by the (pre-) determiner “all”.
Examples:
I/we, the undersigned, . . . ,
We, the undersigned, . . . , (but not All we, the undersigned, . . .)
Other Cases
1. The words such and exclamative what
These are followed by an indefinite article when used with a singular noun.
Examples:
Such a long way.
What a disaster!
2. Noun phrases used as determiners
Example: This color and what size (as in I don’t like the color furniture; What
size shirt does he wear?)
Zero Determiners
In some contexts a complete noun phrase can exist without any determiner (or
with “zero determiner”). The main types of such cases are:
1. With plural or uncountable nouns used to refer to a concept or members of
a class generally
Examples:
Cars are useful. (but the cars when specific cars are being referred
to)
Happiness is contagious. (but the happiness when specific
happiness is referred to, as in the happiness that laughter
engenders…)
2. With plural or uncountable nouns used to refer to some unspecified amount
of something
Examples:
There are dogs under the table.
Do you take milk in your tea?
3. With many proper names
Examples: Tom Smith, Birmingham, Italy, Jupiter, Mars, Paris, Thomas Johnson
4. With singular common nouns in some common expressions
Examples: smiling from ear to ear, leaving town today.