India Languages, asked by nirajsingh9234, 7 months ago

define determiner. how many determiners in the their . explain distributive determiner with example​

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Answered by bijoyoraon6pdidho
2

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Answered by brokenangel21
0

Answer:

What is a determiner?

Simply put, in English, a determiner is a word that introduces a noun. It always comes before a noun, not after, and it also comes before any other adjectives used to describe the noun.

Determiners are required before a singular noun but are optional when it comes to introducing plural nouns. For example, consider the placement and usage of the common determiner the in the sentences below:

The bunny went home.

I ate the chocolate cookie for dessert.

Distributive determiners refer to a group of people or things, and to individual members of the group. They show different ways of looking at the individuals within a group, and they express how something is distributed, shared, or divided.For an instance suppose you have two pens and you are saying to a listener-

‘Both my pens are black in color.’

The listener knows that you are referring to the group as a whole.

Now consider the sentence-

‘Each pen has a fountain nib’.

Here the listener knows that you are referring to the group but giving clarity on the property of individual members in this case ‘pens’. Each of the Distributive Determiner serves different purpose in a clause-

  • Each’ and ‘Every’ talk about the individual members of a group.
  • ‘All’ collectively talks about the whole group.
  • ‘Half’ talks about the divided group.
  • ‘Either’ and ‘neither’ talk about a group of two.

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