English, asked by bharatbhushan8p7r0ck, 11 months ago

he did not make.....mistake in his essay .fill the determiners

Answers

Answered by Joanna7906
6

Answer:

He did not make a mistake in his essay.

Answered by qwstoke
1

"He did not make a mistake in his essay."

In this sentence, "a" is the determiner that is needed before the singular countable noun "mistake". The determiner "a" is used to specify that we are talking about one mistake, and not multiple mistakes.

Information about the noun. In the sentence "He did not make a mistake in his essay," the determiner "a" is used before the noun "mistake" to indicate that we are referring to a single, countable mistake.

There are several different types of determiners in English, including articles (a, an, the), demonstratives (this, that, these, those), possessives (my, your, his, her, its, our, their), and quantifiers (some, any, many, few, several). Each type of determiner serves a slightly different function in the sentence.

Using the correct determiner can be important for conveying the intended meaning of a sentence. For example, if we were to say "He did not make mistakes in his essay," the meaning of the sentence would change to imply that he did not make any mistakes at all, rather than just one mistake.

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