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Subject:
Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
Category: Reference, Education and News > Homework Help Asked by: agninusa-ga List Price: $3.00 |
Posted:
30 Mar 2004 17:30 PST
Expires: 29 Apr 2004 18:30 PDT Question ID: 322692 |
I was taught that THE was a definite article and under certain circumstances an adverb e.g. "the more the merrier". My son's teacher insists that THE is an adjective. |
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There is no answer at this time. |
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Subject:
Re: Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
From: pinkfreud-ga on 30 Mar 2004 17:41 PST |
Sounds wrong to me, but I'm a relic who was born in the 1940s. ;-) Apparently things have changed. Here are some mentions of "the" as an adjective: "while the is an adjective, it is also classified as an article, and specifically as the definite article." http://cleanfun.cz/efl/sgcthesp.htm "Teaching students the concept of modification is crucial, and not very difficult -- if instruction begins with the students previous competence with the language. The students, for example, could be given the following sentence and be asked to break it into three pieces. The young children slowly walked across the lawn. Is any child going to break this into: The young / children slowly / walked across the lawn. No, their understanding of English will probably result in all of them breaking the sentences as: The young children / slowly walked / across the lawn. The concept of modification can now be explained by showing the students that the words that ('go with,' 'describe,' 'chunk to,' or 'modify') nouns, such as 'children,' we call adjectives. Words that go to verbs, like 'slowly,' we call adverbs. The primary reason for teaching students to identify adjectives and adverbs is simply to give them terms with which to look at and explain syntactic connections. Note that with these terms, fourth graders can explain how all the words in our sample sentence are connected. 'The' and 'young' function as adjectives to 'children'; 'slowly' is an adverb to 'walked'; 'the' is an adjective to 'lawn' within the prepositional phrase 'across the lawn.' The prepositional phrase, in turn, is an adverb to 'walked,' and the subject 'children' goes with the verb 'walked.' " http://nweb.pct.edu/homepage/staff/evavra/kiss/RPP/GC_04.htm |
Subject:
Re: Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
From: mathtalk-ga on 30 Mar 2004 17:56 PST |
Articles are adjectives. -- mathtalk-ga |
Subject:
Re: Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
From: pinkfreud-ga on 30 Mar 2004 18:01 PST |
Yes, articles are adjectives, but the definite article is a special type of adjective, and fuddy-duddies like me hate to see it lose its "specialness." Pronouns are nouns. Have today's teachers dropped the concept of "pronoun" from their lexicon? I hope not. |
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Re: Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
From: voila-ga on 30 Mar 2004 19:40 PST |
Limiting adjectives: http://www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/eduweb/grammar/course/speech/1_4a.htm |
Subject:
Re: Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
From: maccool-ga on 30 Mar 2004 20:02 PST |
An interesting article here:\ http://webster.commnet.edu/grammar/determiners/determiners.htm discusses the use of the word 'the' as a determiner, a special kind of adjective that is always followed by a noun. All articles can be considered adjectives because they always describe nouns. So in this sense an article is always an adjective, albeit a special kind of one. |
Subject:
Re: Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
From: probonopublico-ga on 30 Mar 2004 20:27 PST |
Teachers are not always right. On one occasion, (possibly when she was 8 or 9) my elder daughter had used 'sentence' in an essay. Her ENGLISH teacher marked this as a spelling mistake and told her to write out 'sentance' ten times. When challenged, the teacher admitted that her own spelling did leave something to be desired. And this was at a very expensive school that prided itself for its academic standards. |
Subject:
Re: Can the word 'THE' ever be considered an adjective if so when?
From: boquinha-ga on 30 Mar 2004 20:42 PST |
Ah. Bryan's story reminds me of my 3rd grade teacher. I used to correct her spelling lists. My favorite to this day is "Poison Ivory." Sincerely, Boquinha-ga |
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