English, asked by anamikathakur572, 1 month ago

explain what are determiners citing examples​

Answers

Answered by BANGTANARMYGIRL07
3

Answer:

A determiner is a word that comes before a noun or noun phrase. A determiner identifies whether the noun or noun phrase is general or specific. Example of a Determiner: ... “Dog” with determiners: A dog barked.

Answered by JSP2008
15

Explanation:

A determiner is a word that comes before a noun or noun phrase. A determiner identifies whether the noun or noun phrase is general or specific.

Articles - a, an, the. Demonstratives - this, that, these, those, which, etc. Possessive Determiners - my, your, our, their, his, hers, whose, my friend's, our friends, etc. Quantifiers - few, a few, many, much, each, every, some, any, etc.

A determiner is a word placed in front of a noun to specify quantity (e.g., "one dog," "many dogs") or to clarify what the noun refers to (e.g., "my dog," "that dog," "the dog").

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