Determiners &articles
Determiners &articles
Determiner:
‘Determiner’ is a word used before a noun to indicate which things or people we are talking about. The
words ‘a’, ‘the’, ‘my’, ‘this’, ‘some’, ‘many’, etc. are called determiners:
He is a good boy.
All the italicised words are determiners and they limit the meaning of the nouns that follow them.
2. Kinds of Determiners:
Articles:
The article system in English consists of the definite article ‘the’ and the indefinite article ‘a’ or ‘anWe
can think of nouns in a specific or general way. When we refer to particular people or things or
something that has already been mentioned or can be understood, we use the definite article ‘the’.
When we refer to singular nouns for the first time, or refer to things in a general way, we use the
indefinite article ‘a’ or ‘an’.
The definite article is used to refer to the things that are only one in the world:
We use the definite article with the words such as school, university, prison, when we are referring to a
particular building: .
The definite article may be used with the countable nouns that are used in the singular to refer to things
more general:
We use the definite article before something that has already been mentioned.
The definite article is used before a noun that is followed by a relative clause or a prepositional phrase:
The man I met at the station belonged to Haryana.
The definite article is generally used before a noun which is followed by ‘of’:
The definite article is used before the names of seas, rivers, deserts, mountains,
The definite article is used before the names of large public buildings:
The definite article is used before adjectives such as rich, poor, deaf, dumb, blind, to use them as nouns:
We use the definite article before the names of trains and ships:
The indefinite articles (‘a’, ‘an’) are used when we talk about people in a general or indefinite way.
The article ‘a’ is used before the words which begin with consonant sounds and ‘an’ is used before the
words beginning with vowel sounds. However, some words start with a vowel letter but begin with a
consonant sound. So we use the article ‘a’ before these words:
When we use ‘a’ before ‘little’ and few’, there is a change in the meaning of these words. ‘A few’ is used
with plural countable nouns, and ‘a little’ with uncountable nouns. ‘Few’ means not many, while ‘a few’
means a small number. ‘Little’ means not much, while ‘a little’ means some:
Few people visit this temple now. I know a few students of this school.
There is little water in the bucket. There is a little milk in the bottle.
We use ‘an’ with abbreviations beginning with the following letters: A, F, H, I, L, M, N, O, R, S, X (They
shoud have vowel sounds).
He is an N.R.I.
We use the indefinite article before certain nouns considered as a single unit:
The demonstrative determiners are used to talk about persons or things that have already been
mentioned.
This and These refer to the things that are near and can be seen. ‘That’ and ‘Those’ are used to refer to
the things that are at a distance but can be seen.
‘This’ and ‘that’ are used for singular nouns and ‘‘these’’ and ‘those’ for plural nouns.
He is my uncle.
Cardinals are ordinary numbers like one, two, three, etc. They show how many of something there are:
Each is used when we talk about the members of a group individually and every when we make a
general statement. Both are followed by a singular countable noun:
Either is used to talk about two things, but usually indicates that only one of the two is involved.
Exercise (Solved)
(vii) The District Magistrate visited…………………….. flood affected area, (every, either)
(ix) He is the…………. boy who has joined this gym. (first, whose)
Answer: (i) Some (ii) many (iii) that (iv) These (v) much (vi) some (vii) every (viii) Whose (ix) first (x) this.
Exercise (Unsolved)
(iv) The calves were grazing in the field with…………… mothers for many years, (that, their)