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Notice the determiners in the following passage. What kind of determiners are they? Put a Din the box after a demonstrative determiner, a Q after a quantifying determiner, an I after a interrogative determiner, a P after a possessive determiner and an N after a number.

Sally is my__ friend. We play together every__ day. I usually go to her__ house to play. Her__ parents are very nice, but she has two__ brothers who sometimes spoil our__ games. Last week, her __ brothers pulled my__ hair. Sally's mom was very angry with them. "Stop behaving in that__ rough way!" she shouted. I'm glad I don't have any__ brothers

Respuesta :

Answer:

My - Possessive

Every - Quantifying

Her - Possessive

Her - Possessive

Two - Number

Our - Possessive

Her - Possessive

My - Possessive

That - Demonstrative

Any - Quantifying

Explanation:

Determiners are words used to introduce nouns or noun phrases. They always come before them. They are necessary when it comes to introducing singular nouns, but optional when it comes to plural nouns.

Depending on their meaning, there are several types of determiners. Some of them are the indefinite and definite articles, quantifiers, demonstratives, numbers, distributives, interrogatives, possessive demonstratives, etc.

Possessive determiners answer the question whose? (Whose friend? My friend. Whose house? Her house. and so on).

Quantifying determiners (quantifiers) state precisely or suggest approximately the amount or the number of a noun. An example of a quantifying determiner is every - every day.

Numbers are words used to express an exact quality or amount (How many brothers? Two brothers).

Demonstratives show where something is in relation to the speaker (e.g. that way vs this way)

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