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This page pertains to UD version 2.

DET: determiner

Definition

Determiners are words that modify nouns or noun phrases and express the reference of the noun phrase in context. That is, a determiner may indicate whether the noun is referring to a definite or indefinite element of a class, to a closer or more distant element, to an element belonging to a specified person or thing, to a particular number or quantity, etc.

Under this definition, determiners include both articles and pro-adjectives (pronominal adjectives). An important point to note is that the traditional grammar of Western Armenian does not define determiners as a separate word class. Most determiners are traditionally called pronouns; that is, a UD-conformant annotation of Western Armenian must distinguish between substantive pronouns (UD tag PRON) and attributive pronouns (UD tag DET).

Also note that the DET tag includes (pronominal) quantifiers (words like քանի/k’ani “how many”, այսքան/aysk’an “this many”, քանի մը/k’ani më “several”, բոլոր/bolor “all”, ամբողջ/amboġǰ “whole”), which the traditional grammar classifies as a special subclass of pronouns.

Note that Western Armenian noun phrases usually allow one DET modifier, but there are occasional cases of addeterminers, which appear outside the usual determiner, such as այս/ays “this/these” in պէտք է այս բոլոր խեղճութիւնները բարեփոխել/pētk’ ē ays bolor xeġč̣owt’iwnnerë barep’oxelall these miseries must be remedied”. In such cases, both այս/ays “these” and բոլոր/bolor “all” are given the POS DET.

Examples


DET in other languages: [axm] [bej] [bg] [bm] [cs] [cy] [da] [de] [el] [en] [es] [ess] [et] [fi] [fr] [fro] [ga] [grc] [hbo] [hu] [hy] [hyw] [it] [ja] [kk] [kpv] [ky] [myv] [naq] [nmf] [no] [pal] [pcm] [pt] [qpm] [ru] [sl] [sla] [sv] [tr] [tt] [u] [uk] [urj] [xcl] [yue] [zh]