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Ahmed AliPosted 2 years ago
GrammarTensesSpeech & PronunciationPronunciation

Determiners vs adjectives

I am still confused between the difference between adjectives and determiners. Words like more, many, much, few confuse me. And are determiners treated as adjectives?

Thanks in advance.

  

Top answer

Alright, I get why determiners and adjectives can be confusing—they both deal with nouns, but they’re not quite the same thing. Determiners are like little pointers that tell you more about the noun, like how much of it there is, which one it is, or who it belongs to. For example: "Many" in "many people" is a determiner because it tells you how many people we’re talking about.

  • Alright, I get why determiners and adjectives can be confusing—they both deal with nouns, but they’re not quite the same thing.
  • Determiners are like little pointers that tell you more about the noun, like how much of it there is, which one it is, or who it belongs to.
  • For example: "Many" in "many people" is a determiner because it tells you how many people we’re talking about.
  • "Few" in "few students" is another determiner because it’s giving you an idea of quantity.
  • Adjectives , on the other hand, are all about describing the noun’s qualities—like what kind of person, place, or thing it is.
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1 Answers
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Alright, I get why determiners and adjectives can be confusing—they both deal with nouns, but they’re not quite the same thing.

Determiners are like little pointers that tell you more about the noun, like how much of it there is, which one it is, or who it belongs to. For example:

  • "Many" in "many people" is a determiner because it tells you how

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