Determiners and Quantifiers
Determiners and Quantifiers
Determiners and Quantifiers
Determiners and quantifiers are words we use in front of nouns (before) a noun or at the
beginning of a noun phrase to make it clear what the noun refers to such as the, my, this, some,
twenty, each, any .. We use determiners to identify things (this book, my sister) and we use
quantifiers to say how much or how many (a few people, a lot of problems).
There can be only ONE main determiner in a noun phrase
Determiners include the following common types:
Determiners in English
We use a specific determiner when we believe the listener/reader knows exactly what we are
referring to:
his/that, these/those
The demonstrative determiners this/that, these/those point to something that is close or
distant. The closeness can be in:
space (next to the speaker, 20 metres from the speaker, 1000km from the speaker)
time (now, yesterday, last week, next year)
near far
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
Like all determiners, demonstrative determiners come at the beginning of a noun phrase, so
they come in front of any adjective(s).
Possessive Determiners
my, your, his, her, its, our, their
We use possessive determiners to show who owns or "possesses" something. The possessive
determiners are:
Warning! These are determiners. Don't confuse them with possessive pronouns.
Like all determiners, possessive determiners come at the beginning of a noun phrase, so they
come in front of any adjective(s).
SINGULAR
PLURAL
SINGULAR or PLURAL
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
I like your hair.
your M/F
Your two children are lovely.
General determiners
We use a general determiner when we are talking about things in general and the listener/reader
does not know exactly what we are referring to.
Indefinite articles : a, an
Numbers : one, ten, thirty
Distributives : all, both, half, either, neither, each, every
Difference words : other, another
Pre-determiners : such, what, rather, quite
The most frequent general determiner is the indefinite article a/an used with singular nouns:
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
Girls normally do better in school than boys. (plural nouns)
Milk is very good for you. (uncount noun)
Health and education are very important. (uncount nouns)
We use the general determiner any with a singular noun or an uncount noun when we are
talking about all of those people or things:
It's very easy. Any child can do it. = All children can do it.
With a full licence you are allowed to drive any car. = all cars
I like bananas, oranges, apples – any fruit. = all kinds of fruit
(Note that any is also used as a quantifier in negative and interrogative sentences.)
We use the general determiner another to talk about an additional person or thing:
Quantifiers :
We use quantifiers when we want to give someone information about the number of
something: how much or how many.
We can use these quantifiers with both count and uncount nouns:
These more colloquial forms are also used with both count and uncount nouns:
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
plenty of heaps of a load of loads of tons of
We do not normally use the quantifier some in negative and interrogative sentences. We
normally use any:
These more colloquial forms are used only with count nouns:
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
These quantifiers are used particularly with abstract nouns such as time, money and trouble:
We put a noun directly after a quantifier when we are talking about members of a group in
general:
but if we are talking about members of a specific group, we use of the as well:
Note: with all and both, we don’t need to use of. We can say all the … and both the … .
If we are talking about two people or things, we use the quantifiers both, either and neither:
Note that nouns with both have a plural verb but nouns with either and neither have a
singular verb.
We use the quantifiers every and each with singular nouns to mean all:
There was a party in every street. (= There were parties in all the streets.)
Every shop was decorated with flowers. (= All the shops were decorated with flowers.)
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
Each child was given a prize. (= All the children were given a prize.)
There was a prize in each competition. (= There were prizes in all the competitions.)
We often use every to talk about times like days, weeks and years:
Every shop was decorated with flowers. (NOT The every shop)
Each child was given a prize. (NOT The each child)
Numbers
cardinal and ordinal numbers double/twice/three times...
Numbers are one kind of determiner. In terms of meaning, numbers are similar to quantifier
determiners, but most grammarians treat them separately.
Numbers can be "cardinal" (one, two, three) or "ordinal" (first, second, third), as shown in this
table:
cardinal ordinal
1 one first 1st
2 two second 2nd
3 three third 3rd
10 ten tenth 10th
21 twenty-one twenty-first 21st
99 ninety-nine ninety-ninth 99th
100 one hundred one hundredth 100th
1000 one thousand one thousandth 1000th
Like all determiners, numbers come at the beginning of a noun phrase, so they come in front
of any adjective(s).
When used together in a noun phrase, ordinals normally come before cardinals.
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
The interrogative determiners are which and what.
Here are three books. Which book do you think is the most interesting?
They have four boys. Which boy is the oldest?
I can’t remember which house Janet lives in.
Which restaurant did you go to?
what is a general determiner
Pre-determiners come before main determiners and post-determiners come after main
determiners
Order of Determiners
There are rules about the order of determiners in a noun phrase.
1. It's possible to have NO determiner: John likes dogs. People breathe air. Wine is alcohol.
This is the so-called "zero determiner", and is mainly possible with proper nouns (i.e. names),
plural countable nouns and uncountable nouns.
2. All determiners, when present, come at the BEGINNING of a noun phrase (before any
adjectives): the big black dog / my favourite car
3. If you have a "main determiner", you can have only ONE. The main determiners are:
So if you have an article, you cannot also have a demonstrative. If you have a possessive, you
cannot also have an article. You can have one article OR one demonstrative OR one
possessive. For example, you can say "this dog" or "my dog", but you cannot say "this my
dog". The table below shows how the main determiners "mutually exclude" each other:
noun phrase
main determiners
a dog
the soup
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
this flower
those birds
my sister
their car
6. If you do have more than one determiner, the table below is a guide to the normal order.
Remember, this is a guide only. Not every combination is possible.
pre-deter-
main determiners post-determiners
miners
one/two...
many/
much
all, both a/ this/that first/ more/
half, one-third an/ these/ my/her etc second... most
double, twice, ten times the those last/next few/little
less/least
several
other
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
these first three seats
my last wife
A determiner occurs at the beginning of a noun phrase and in some way qualifies the rest of
the noun phrase. A determiner cannot exist alone:
Most determiners and pronouns are exactly the same word: either (determiner) and either
(pronoun)
A few determiners and pronouns are close but not exactly the same: my (determiner) and
mine (pronoun)
determiners pronouns
demonstratives
quantifiers
no none
many/much many/much
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
enough, several enough, several
each each
interrogatives
determiners pronouns
possessives
my mine
your yours
his his
her hers
its its
our ours
their theirs
Practice :
Choose the right forms some, any, an or a to complete the following sentences in English.
At twelve o’clock we had food.
Did you bring ……………… ;;; bread?
I’d like …………………….. ;water, please.
Didn’t you bring ………………………… money?
I asked the waiter for………………………. tea.
I bought……………… ; books, but I didn’t buy ………………………… ;;pen.
I have………………………. information for you.
I sent her ………………. ;card from France.
I want…………………… bread and ……………………..kilo of cheese, please.
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FIRST YEAR GRAMMAR
Determiners and Qualifiers
I’ve got …………………bananas and …………………. apple.
I have …………………….bad news for you.
She didn’t give me…………………… money.
Sorry, I haven’t got………………… matches.
There aren’t …………………………. students here at the moment.
Would you like …………….. coffee?
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