DET
: determiner
Definition
Determiners (or pro-adjectives) are words that modify nouns or noun phrases and express the reference of the noun phrase in context. That is, a determiner may indicate whether the noun is referring to a definite or indefinite element of a class, to a closer or more distant element, to an element belonging to a specified person or thing, to a particular number or quantity, etc.
An important point to note is that the traditional grammar of Czech does not
define determiners as a separate word class. Czech does not have articles.
Most determiners are traditionally called pronouns; that is, an UD-conformant
annotation of Czech must distinguish between substantive pronouns (UD tag PRON)
and attributive pronouns (UD tag DET
).
Also note that the DET
tag includes (pronominal) quantifiers (words
like mnoho, málo “many, few”), which the traditional grammar classifies
as a special subclass of numerals. However,
cardinal numerals in the narrow sense (jeden, pět, sto) are not
tagged DET
even though some authors would include them in
quantifiers. Cardinal numbers have their own tag NUM.
Conversion from the Prague Dependency Treebank
Since the PDT tagset (like all other Czech tagsets) does not distinguish
substantive and attributive pronouns, morphological tags alone are not enough
to find the correct universal POS tag.
Morphological rules could help, as the inflection patterns of some pronouns
bear similarities to adjectival inflection (especially the ability to inflect for gender).
Unlike in UD v1, we no longer use the dependency tree to distinguish between determiners and pronouns.
Instead, we use a pre-defined list of lemmas that are DET
if their PDT tag indicates pronoun.
See also here for a Slavic-wide discussion of the distinction between determiners and pronouns.
Examples
- possessive determiners: můj, tvůj, jeho, její, náš, váš, jejich “my, your, his, her, our, your, their”
- reflexive possessive determiner: svůj “one’s own”
- demonstrative determiners: tohle as in Tohle auto jsem viděl včera. “I saw this car yesterday.”
- interrogative determiners: který as in Které auto se ti líbí? “Which car do you like?”
- relative determiners: který as in Zajímá mě, které auto se ti líbí. “I wonder which car you like.”
- relative possessive determiner: jehož “whose”
- indefinite determiners: nějaký, některý
- total determiners: každý, všechen
- negative determiners: žádný as in Nemáme žádná auta. “We have no cars available.”
References
DET in other languages: [bej] [bg] [bm] [cs] [cy] [da] [de] [el] [en] [es] [ess] [et] [fi] [fro] [fr] [ga] [grc] [hu] [hy] [it] [ja] [kk] [kpv] [ky] [myv] [no] [pcm] [pt] [qpm] [ru] [sla] [sl] [sv] [tr] [tt] [uk] [u] [urj] [xcl] [yue] [zh]