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Nouns, Determiners and Nouns, Determiners and PronounsPronouns
•Seif ’s library
Definitions of “Noun”
• Classic “A person, place, or thing”• Sanskrit grammarians - does not have a time axis,
like frozen time• Formal definition - takes nominal affixes: noun
derivational affix (e.g., government), can take plural, can occur with possessive suffix
• Functional definition - can be preceded by an article (the/a house), can appear in a frame sentence ((The) _____ seem(s) nice.)
Number
• Types of plural: normal, internal change, zero plural, foreign plurals (syllabi, curricula, indices, data)
• Nouns of quantity - three dozen, hundred, pound (in British English), mile (in some dialects)
• Nouns resitant to singular/plural contrast– Proper nouns– Some words ending in -s (news, physics, mumps, billiards,
dominoes)– Noncount (mass) nouns - cheese, instability– Binary nouns - scissors, pants, trousers, glasses, binoculars, shorts– Aggregate nouns - people, cattle, clergy, police, offspring, series,
barracks, committee (British English)
Gender
• Generally not a significant grammatical distinction in English, except for with pronouns
• Animals - Familiar animals often have a gender distinction and use male/female pronouns (e.g., horse/stallion/mare (he, she), but spider (it)
• Gender with other nouns– Gendered nouns (bachelor, usherette, king, princess…) - he, she– Dual nouns (doctor, student, participant, customer) - he, she– Plural nouns - “he or she”, “they”
Common/Proper Nouns
• Common Nouns do not refer to a specific person, place, event, or thing– E.g., shoe, house, day, car
• Proper Nouns refer to specific person, place, event, or thing– E.g., Pat, the Queen, Chicago, Christmas, Lucille, General Motors– Do not usually follow articles: on (*the) Christmas Day, in (*the)
Chicago, *the Shakespeare– Do not usually take plurals– Exceptions:
• Referring to a real or imagined unique proper noun: “the Christmas of 1942”, “Are you the Howard Dean?”, “That’s not the Chicago I remember.”
• Certain place names: the Missippi River, the Great Lakes, the Rocky Mountains, the Atlantic Ocean, the White House
• Certain institutions: the New York Times, the Lincoln Museum,
Count/Mass (Noncount) Nouns
• Count Nouns are nouns that can be counted and take a plural– E.g., shoe, horse, boy, inconsistency, universe– Occur with “many” - “How many ____?”, “There were many ___”– Occur with “few” - “too few ____”, “We only have a few _____”
• Mass Nouns (Noncount Nouns) are nouns that cannot be counted– E.g., sugar, water, rice, wheat, mud, milk, music, laziness– Occur with “much” - “How much __”, “There is much ____”– Occurs with “little” instead of “few”: “too little ____”, “We only have a
little ____”– Occur with partitive constructions to indicate units - grain of sand/rice,
cup of water/milk, piece of music/leather, clump of mud, blade of grass, slice of meat/pie, item of clothing
• Some nouns can be both– E.g., pie, cake, brick, stone, love
Types of Nouns
Proper Count Mass EitherIsolatedNoun
Pat *book music pie
DefinitieArticle
*the Pat the book the music the pie
IndefiniteArticle
*a Pat a book *a music a pie
Some N *some Pat some book some music some piePlural ? Pats books *musics pies
DeterminersDeterminers
• Articles – Definite (the), indefinite (a/an)• Demonstratives – this, these, that, those• Possessives – my, our, your…• Indefinites (Quantifiers) – some, any, no, every,
other, another, many, more, most, enough, few, less, much, either, neither, several, all, both, each, half…
• Cardinal Numbers – one, two, three, four…• Ordinal Numbers – first, second, third…
Definite and Indefinite ArticlesDefinite and Indefinite Articles• Definite Article – the
– Refers to something predictable– E.g., from a the narrative context – Once upon a time there was a
king…Now the king had three daughters.– E.g., from the cultural context – What do you think of the President?;
Do you watch the news on television?– E.g., from the situational context – We went to a restaurant and liked
the menu (waiter, service, food, *teller, *nurse); We were in a house, in the dining room, when we heard a knock at the door.
• Indefinite Articles – a/an, this (very informal)– Refer to something unpredictable– E.g., I met an interesting man; Once upon a time there was a king.; I
know this man and he says…
Generic vs. Specific Reference
• Specific refers to a specific person or thing– E.g., Look at that elephant; Yesterday I met a man.
• Generic refers to any one of a group– Generic pronouns – one, they, you, s/he– Nouns can also have generic reference – A good man is
hard to find; The bald eagle is back for near extinction.• Some sentences are ambiguous in terms of generic
or specific reference – E.g., My sister wants to marry a rich man; The lion is dangerous.
Pronoun Types
• Central– Personal – e.g., I, me, they, them– Reflexive – e.g., myself, themselves – Reciprocal – each other, one another– Possessive – e.g., my/mine, their/theirs
• Relative – which, who, whose, whom, that• Interrogative – who, whom, which, whose, what• Demonstrative – this, these, that, those• Indefinite – e.g., both, each, nobody, everything
Personal PronounsPrimary Possessive
Subject ObjectReflexive
Determiner IndependentSingular I me myself my mine1st
person Plural we us ourselves our oursSingular you you yourself your yours2nd
person Plural you you yourselves your yoursSingularmasculine
he him himself his his
Singularfeminine
she her herself her hers
Singularnonpersonal
it it itself its (its)
3rd
person
Plural they them themselves their theirs
Indefinite Pronouns
one some any none everyone anotheroneself someone anyone no one any other
somebody anybody nobody everybody no othersomething anything nothing everything others
Many, more, most, enough, few, less, much, either, neither, several, all, both, each