det: determiner
The relation determiner det holds between a nominal head and its determiner.
This relation is used for adjectival pronouns that function as agreeing modifiers, as well as for
multiword expressions formed from such pronouns (1). Non-pronominal adjectives are
tagged ADJ and the relation is labeled amod (2).
Po kiemą vaikštinėjo kažkokia katė . \n Some-kind-of cat was-wandering around the-yard .
det(katė, kažkokia)
det(cat, Some-kind-of)
Aukšta garso kokybė . \n High sound quality .
amod(kokybė, Aukšta)
amod(quality, High)
Relative pronouns (kuris, kuri, ”whitch” / “that”) are morphologically tagged as DET, but in a subordinate clause the relation is labeled nsubj, obj, iobj, obl, or obl:arg, depending on how the noun replacing these pronouns would be annotated (3). In interrogative sentences, however, their relation is labeled det, because an interrogative pronoun, when used together with a noun, agrees with it and does not take over the function of the noun (4).
Namas , kurį aš pirkau . \n The-house that I bought .
obj(pirkau, kurį)
obj(bought, that)
Kurio namo jūs norite ? \n Which house do you want ?
det(namo, Kurio)
det(house, Which)
det in other languages: [axm] [bej] [bg] [bm] [cop] [cs] [de] [el] [en] [es] [eu] [fi] [fr] [fro] [ga] [gsw] [gub] [hbo] [hy] [it] [ja] [kk] [ky] [lt] [naq] [no] [pcm] [pt] [ro] [ru] [sl] [ssp] [sv] [swl] [tr] [u] [vi] [xcl] [yue] [zh]