Determiners are words used before nouns to indicate which things or people we are talking about, limiting the meaning of the nouns that follow them. |
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Fill in the blank: The article system in English consists of the definite article ‘___’ and the indefinite articles ‘___’ or ‘___’. |
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True or False: The definite article 'the' can be used to refer to general concepts or things. |
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False. The definite article 'the' is used to refer to specific persons or things, not general concepts. |
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'A' is used before words that begin with consonant sounds, while 'an' is used before words that begin with vowel sounds. |
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Fill in the blank: Demonstrative determiners, such as ‘this’ and ‘___’, refer to things that are at a distance. |
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What is the difference between 'each' and 'every' in distributive determiners? |
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'Each' is used when talking about members of a group individually, while 'every' is used to make a general statement about all members of the group. |
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Fill in the blank: The word ‘___’ is used before singular countable nouns and indicates a quantity. |
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Quantifiers refer to the quantity of things or the amount of something, indicating how much or how many. |
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Interrogative determiners are used to ask questions about specific information, such as 'what', 'which', and 'whose'. |
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