Determiners in English
Determiners in English
Determiners in English
Determiners are words placed in front of a noun to make it clear what the noun refers to. Use the
pages in this section to help you use English determiners correctly.
Determiners in English
Definite article : the
Indefinite articles : a, an
Demonstratives: this, that, these, those
Pronouns and possessive determiners : my, your, his, her, its, our, their
Quantifiers : a few, a little, much, many, a lot of, most, some, any, enough
Numbers : one, ten, thirty
Distributives : all, both, half, either, neither, each, every
Difference words : other, another
Pre-determiners : such, what, rather, quite
Demonstratives
Demonstratives show where an object, event, or person is in relation to the speaker. They can
refer to a physical or a psychological closeness or distance. When talking about events, the near
demonstratives are often used to refer to the present while the far demonstratives often refer to
the past.
Demonstrative usage
Examples
This is a nice surprise! That must have been a nice surprise for you.
This sugar is for my crepes. You can use that sugar for your cake.
Near the speaker Far from the speaker
Sentence placement
Demonstratives can be placed before the noun or the adjective that modifies the noun.
Indefinite Articles
In English, the two indefinite articles are a and an. Like other articles, indefinite articles are
invariable. You use one or the other, depending on the first letter of the word following the
article, for pronunciation reasons. Use a when the next word starts with a consonant, or before
words starting in u and eu when they sound like you. Use an when the next word starts with a
vowel (a,e,i,o,u) or with a mute h.
Examples
a boy
an apple
a car
a helicopter
Distributives
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.
Using distributives
Using "each" and "every" to talk about the members of a group as individuals
Using "all" to talk about the whole group
Using "half" to talk about a divided group
Using "both", "either", and "neither" to talk about pairs of people or things
Examples
On Monday, an unarmed man stole $1,000 from the bank. The thief hasn't been caught yet.
I was walking past Benny's Bakery when I decided to go into the bakery to get some bread.
There's a position available in my team. The job will involve some international travel.
Use the when you assume there is just one of something in that place, even if it has not been
mentioned before.
Examples
Use the in sentences or clauses where you define or identify a particular person or object.
Examples
Use the with decades.
Examples
Proper nouns
Use the with names of geographical areas, rivers, mountain ranges, groups of islands, canals, and
oceans.
Examples
Use the with countries that include the words "republic", "kingdom", or "states" in their names.
Examples
Use the with the names of hotels & restaurants, unless these are named after a person.
Examples
Use the with the names of families, but not with the names of individuals.
Examples
Examples