English determiners
English determiners are words – such as the, a, each, some, which, this, and numerals such as six – that are most commonly used with nouns to specify their referents. The determiners form a closed lexical category in English.
The syntactic role characteristically performed by determiners is known as the determinative function. A determinative combines with a noun to form a noun phrase. This function typically comes before any modifiers in the NP. The determinative function is typically obligatory in a singular, countable, common noun phrase.
Semantically, determiners are usually definite or indefinite, and they often agree with the number of the head noun. Morphologically, they are usually simple and do not inflect.
The most common of these are the definite and indefinite articles, the and a. Other determiners in English include the demonstratives this and that, and the quantifiers as well as the numerals. Determiners also occasionally function as modifiers in noun phrases, determiner phrases or in adjective or adverb phrases. They may appear on their own without a noun, similar to pronouns, but they are distinct from pronouns.
Some sources, e.g. Cambridge Dictionary, Longman Dictionary, Collins Dictionary, and Collins COBUILD English grammar distinguish between predeterminers and determiners. Following this distinction, determiners can't be used directly next to each other. However, it is possible to put a predeterminer before a determiner.
Terminology
Words and phrases can be categorized by both their syntactic category and their syntactic function. In the clause the dog bit the man, for example, the dog belongs to the syntactic category of noun phrase and performs the syntactic function of subject. The distinction between category and function is at the heart of a terminological issue surrounding the word determiner: various grammars have used the word to describe a category, a function, or both.Some sources, such as A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language, use determiner as a term for a category as defined above and determinative for the function that determiners and possessives typically perform in a noun phrase. Others, such as The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, make the opposite terminological choice. And still others use determiner for both the category and the function. This article uses determiner for the category and determinative for the function in the noun phrase.
The lexical category determiner is the class of words described in this article. They head determiner phrases, which can realize the functions determinative, predeterminative, and modifier:
- determiner phrases as determinatives: the box, this hill
- determiner phrases as predeterminatives: all the time, both those cars
- determiner phrases as modifiers: these two images, clear enough
- noun phrases as determinatives: my question, this size room
- prepositional phrases as determinatives: over twenty belts, up to a hundred people
History
has no concept to match determiners, which are instead classified as adjectives, articles, or pronouns. The articles and demonstratives have sometimes been seen as forming their own category, but are often classified as adjectives. Linguist and historian Peter Matthews observes that the assumption that determiners are distinct from adjectives is relatively new, "an innovation of … the early 1960s."In 1892, prior to the emergence of the determiner category in English grammars, Leon Kellner, and later Jespersen, discussed the idea of "determination" of a noun:
In Old English the possessive pronoun, or, as the French say, "pronominal adjective," expresses only the conception of belonging and possession; it is a real adjective, and does not convey, as at present, the idea of determination. If, therefore, Old English authors want to make nouns preceded by possessive pronouns determinative, they add the definite article.
By 1924, Harold Palmer had proposed a part of speech called "Pronouns and Determinatives", effectively "group with the pronouns all determinative adjectives, shortening the term to determinatives." Palmer separated this category from more prototypical adjectives because, unlike prototypical adjectives, words in this category are not used predicatively, tend not to inflect for comparison, and tend not to be modified.
In 1933, Leonard Bloomfield introduced the term determiner used in this article, which appears to define a syntactic function performed by "limiting adjectives".
Our limiting adjectives fall into two sub-classes of determiners and numeratives … The determiners are defined by the fact that certain types of noun expressions are always accompanied by a determiner.
Matthews argues that the next important contribution was by Ralph B. Long in 1961, though Matthews notes that Long's contribution is largely ignored in the bibliographies of later prominent grammars, including A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language and CGEL. Matthews illustrates Long's analysis with the noun phrase this boy: "this is no longer, in account, an adjective. It is instead a pronoun, of a class he called ‘determinative’, and it has the function of a ‘determinative modifier’." This analysis was developed in a 1962 grammar by Barbara M. H. Strang and in 1972 by Randolph Quirk and colleagues. In 1985, A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language appears to have been the first work to explicitly conceive of determiner as a distinct lexical category.
Determiners as heads?
Until the late 1980s, linguists assumed that, in a phrase like the red ball, the head was the noun ball and that the was a dependent. But a student at MIT named Paul Abney proposed, in his PhD dissertation about English noun phrases in 1987, that the head was not the noun ball but the determiner the, so that the red ball is a determiner phrase. This has come to be known as the DP analysis or the DP hypothesis, and as of 2008 it is the majority view in generative grammar, though it is rejected in other perspectives. Chomsky also rejects it.Determiners versus other lexical categories
Adjectives
The main similarity between adjectives and determiners is that they can both appear immediately before nouns.The key difference between adjectives and determiners in English is that adjectives cannot function as determinatives. The determinative function is an element in NPs that is obligatory in most singular countable NPs and typically occurs before any modifiers. For example, *I live in small house is ungrammatical because small house is a singular countable NP lacking a determinative. The adjective small is a modifier, not a determinative. In contrast, if the adjective is replaced or preceded by a possessive NP or a determiner, then it becomes grammatical because possessive NPs and determiners function as determinatives.
There are a variety of other differences between the categories. Determiners appear in partitive constructions, while adjectives do not. Adjectives can function as a predicative complement in a verb phrase, but determiners typically cannot. Adjectives are not typically definite or indefinite, while determiners are. Adjectives as modifiers in a noun phrase do not need to agree in number with a head noun while some determiners do. Morphologically, adjectives often inflect for grade, while few determiners do. Finally, adjectives can typically form adverbs by adding -ly, while determiners cannot.
The boundary between determiner and adjective is not always clear, however. In the case of the word many, for example, the distinction between determiner and adjective is fuzzy, and different linguists and grammarians have placed this term into different categories. The CGEL categorizes many as a determiner because it can appear in partitive constructions, as in many of them. Alternatively, Bas Aarts offers three reasons to support the analysis of many as an adjective. First, it can be modified by very, which is a characteristic typical of certain adjectives but not of determiners. Second, it can occur as a predicative complement: his sins are many. Third, many has a comparative and superlative form.
Pronouns
Possessive pronouns such as ''my'' and ''your''
There is disagreement about whether possessive words such as my and your are determiners or not. For example, Collins COBUILD Grammar classifies them as determiners while CGEL classify them as pronouns and A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language has them dually classified as determiners' and as pronouns in determinative function.'The main reason for classifying these possessive words as determiners is that, like determiners, they usually function as determinative in an NP. Reasons for calling them pronouns and not determiners include that the pronouns typically inflect, while determiners typically allow no morphological change. Determiners also appear in partitive constructions, while pronouns do not. Also, some determiners can be modified by adverbs, but this is not possible for pronouns.