Definite determiners (e.g. the, this/that/these/those, my/your/his/her, etc.) tell the reader/listener that the noun refers to something they already ____. When there’s no definite determiner, it’s a signal for the reader/listener to expect____ information.Indefinite determiners (e.g. a/an, another, some/any/no, much/many, all/most/each, numbers, etc.) mainly give information about ____. Most indefinite determiners can come before a definite determiner, usually with ____ (e.g. some of the time; three of my friends). You don’t need "of" after all, both, half, twice, or X times (e.g. both (of) those people;____ ____ ____ Numbers, as well as many/few/little, can come after a definite determiner (e.g. my three ideas; those few visitors;____ You can sometimes add an ordinal number (e.g. first, tenth) or a similar word (e.g. next, previous, last) between two determiners (e.g. the next three days;____ You can modify determiners with adverbs (e.g. exactly the problem; almost all the people; not quite half the time;____). You can use quite, rather, such, or something before a/an and an adjective or noun expressing an opinion (e.g. quite a challenge; such a bad experience; ____; ____).
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