- •The Functions of Nouns in the Sentence
- •Classification of Nouns
- •Morphological Composition of Nouns
- •3. Compound nouns.
- •Selected uncountable nouns and their countable equivalents
- •Appendix 4
- •Partitives: nouns which refer to part of a whole
- •Appendix 5
- •Collective nouns followed by 'of
- •Appendix 6
- •3. The category of number
- •Irregular Plurals
- •Compound nouns and their plurals
- •Agreement between subject and predicate (concord).
- •The category of gender.
- •Identifying masculine and feminine through nouns
- •Make-female-young-group distinctions for some animals
- •Identifying masculine or feminine through pronouns
- •6. The category of case.
- •The Nominative Case
- •The Possessive Case
- •The Objective Case
- •7. The use of indefinite article (including - a or an, a/an or one). The Use of the Indefinite Article
- •8. The use of definite article with common nouns. The Use of the Definite Article
- •9. Zero article with common nouns.
- •10. Definite and zero articles with proper nouns. The Use of the Definite Article with Proper Nouns
- •11. Special cases in the use of articles. Special cases in the use of articles
- •12. Classification of pronouns. Personal, pronoun ‘one', possessive and reflexive pronouns.
- •14. Demonstratives. Some, any, no, every and their compounds. Demonstrative Pronouns
- •15. Either/neither/both, none/all/whole/each, (an)other.
11. Special cases in the use of articles. Special cases in the use of articles
1) The use of articles with the nouns day, night, morning, evening:
The nouns day, night, morning, evening are used without articles:
(a) if day und morning, mean 'light' and night and evening mean 'darkness', or if they denote a certain part of the day: Day is meant for work, night for sleep.
(b) in the expressions by day, at night, from morning till night:
It is easier to work by day than at night.
The definite article is used when these nouns are modified by a particularizing attribute or when the situation makes them definite:
He will never forget the day when he met her. The night was warm and beautifully still.
The definite article is also used in the expressions: in the morning, in the afternoon, in the evening.
The indefinite article is used when the noun is modified by a descriptive attribute: I spent a sleepless night.
When the nouns morning and evening are modified by the adjectives early and late, no articles are used because these adjectives do not describe the morning or night, but only show the time: It was early morning when the train pulled into the little siding.
2) The use of articles with names of seasons.
Names of seasons are used without articles if they show a certain time of the year: It was spring. I like spring.
The definite article is used when these nouns are modified by a particularizing attribute or when the situation makes them definite: It happened in the spring of 1930. The spring was cold and rainy.
The indefinite article is used when these nouns are modified by a descriptive attribute: It was a cold spring.
When names of seasons are modified by the adjectives early or late, no articles are used: It was early spring.
3) The use of articles with the nouns school, college, bed, prison, jail.
The nouns school, college, bed, prison, jail are used without an article when they lose their concrete meaning and express the purpose for which the objects denoted by these nouns serve. When these nouns denote concrete objects, the articles are used according to the general principle.
(a) School, college.
to be at school, to go to school = to be a schoolboy (schoolgirl)
to be at college = to be a student of a college
to leave school = to finish or drop one's studies
It was at seventeen that he decided to leave school.
to go to the school = not as a pupil (the building is meant)
to leave the school = to leave the building
Mother went to the school yesterday to attend a parents' meeting. She left the school at 7 o’clock.
(b) Bed.
to go to bed — ложиться спать
to be in bed—лежать в постели
And now you had better go to bed. Good-night.
to be in the bed, to be on the bed = an article of furniture is meant: Неr portrait was on the wall beside the bed.
(c) Prison, jail.
to be in prison (in jail) = to be a prisoner
to be sent to prison, to be put in prison = as a prisoner
Mr. Dorrit was in prison many years.
Mr. Dorrit was sent to prison for debt.
to be in the prison, to go to the prison = not as a prisoner (the building is meant)
Mr. Dorrit's family lived in the prison.
4) The use of articles with the noun town.
The noun town when used with prepositions does not take an article:
(a) when we mean the nearest town (if we live in the country) or the town we live in: You cannot go to town tomorrow. (Austen)
(b) when the noun town is opposed to the noun country: He was not used to country life, having spent twenty years in town.
Otherwise the noun town is used with the definite or indefinite article: I want to go to the town where I was born.
