You use a "specific determiner" when people know exactly which thing(s) or person/people you are talking about.
The specific determiners are:
The definite article : the |
Demonstratives : this, that, these, those |
Possessives : my, your, his, her, its, our, their |
For example:
* The dog barked at the boy.
* These apples are rotten.
* Their bus was late.
You use "general determiners" to talk about people or things without saying exactly who or what they are.
The general determiners are:
the indefinite articles : a, an | |||
a few a little all another any | both each either enough every | few fewer less little many more most much | neither no other several some |
For example:
* A man sat under an umbrella.
* Have you got any English books that I could have?
* There is enough food to feed everyone.
0 comments:
Post a Comment