English, asked by subhashchqnd, 6 months ago

.....................is my house. (Determinor) * pls tell


Answers

Answered by Arshdeep505
5

Answer:

This

Explanation:

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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.

Answered by shantanukumar9686
1

Answer:

Determiners occur before nouns, and they indicate the kind of reference which the nouns have. Depending on their relative position before a noun, we distinguish three classes of determiners. A sentence like this is somewhat unusual, because it is rare for all three determiner slots to be filled in the same sentence.

Explanation:

Determiners include articles (a, an, the), cardinal numbers (one, two, three...) and ordinal numbers (first, second, third...), demonstratives (this, that, these, those), partitives (some of, piece of, and others), quantifiers (most, all, and others), difference words (other, another), and possessive determiners (my, ...

This is my house....

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