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  2. English nouns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_nouns

    While determiners that occur before nouns tend to function as determinatives, noun phrases can contain only one determinative, so additional determiner phrases must have some other function. In these two images , the determiner phrase these fills the determinative function, so the additional determiner phrase two must instead be analyzed as a ...

  3. English determiners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_determiners

    DPs are not the only phrases that can function as determinative, but they are the most common. [1]: 330 A determinative is a function only in noun phrases. It is usually the leftmost constituent in the phrase, appearing before any modifiers. [24] A noun phrase may have many modifiers, but only one determinative is possible. [1]

  4. Determiner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Determiner

    In such approaches, noun phrases containing only a noun without a determiner present are called "bare noun phrases", and are considered to be dominated by determiner phrases with null heads. [8] For more detail on theoretical approaches to the status of determiners, see Noun phrase § With and without determiners.

  5. Postpositive adjective - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postpositive_adjective

    Noun adjuncts (nouns qualifying another noun) also generally come before the nouns they modify: in a phrase like book club, the adjunct (modifier) book comes before the head (modified noun) club. By contrast, prepositional phrases , adverbs of location, etc., as well as relative clauses , come after the nouns they modify: the elephant in the ...

  6. Noun adjunct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noun_adjunct

    The adjectival noun term was formerly synonymous with noun adjunct but now usually means nominalized adjective (i.e., an adjective used as a noun) as a term that contrasts the noun adjunct process, e.g. the Irish meaning "Irish people" or the poor meaning "poor people". [citation needed] Japanese adjectival nouns are a different concept.

  7. Grammatical modifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_modifier

    In linguistics, a modifier is an optional element in phrase structure or clause structure [1] which modifies the meaning of another element in the structure. For instance, the adjective "red" acts as a modifier in the noun phrase "red ball", providing extra details about which particular ball is being referred to.

  8. English grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_grammar

    a complement or postmodifier [5] may be a prepositional phrase (... of London), a relative clause (like ... which we saw yesterday), certain adjective or participial phrases (... sitting on the beach), or a dependent clause or infinitive phrase appropriate to the noun (like ... that the world is round after a noun such as fact or statement, or ...

  9. English possessive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_possessive

    The possessive form of an English noun, or more generally a noun phrase, is made by suffixing a morpheme which is represented orthographically as ' s (the letter s preceded by an apostrophe), and is pronounced in the same way as the regular English plural ending (e)s: namely, as / ɪ z / when following a sibilant sound (/ s /, / z /, / ʃ /, / ʒ /, / tʃ / or / dʒ /), as / s / when following ...