Dictionary Definition
definiteness n : the quality of being predictable
with great confidence [syn: determinateness]
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
In grammatical theory, definiteness
is a feature of noun phrases,
distinguishing between entities which are specific and identifiable
in a given context (definite noun phrases) and entities which are
not (indefinite noun phrases).
There is considerable variation in the expression
of definiteness across languages: some languages use a definite
article
(which can be a free form, a phrasal clitic, or an affix on the noun) to mark a
definite noun phrase. Examples are:
- Free form: English the boy.
- Phrasal clitic: as in Basque: Cf. emakume ("woman"), emakume-a (woman-ART: "the woman"), emakume ederr-a (woman beautiful-ART: "the beautiful woman")
- Noun affix: as in Romanian: om ("man"), om-ul (man-ART: "the man"); om-ul bun (man-ART good: "the good man")
- Prefix on both noun and adjective: Arabic al-kitāb al-kabīr الكتاب الكبير with two instances of al- (DEF-book-DEF-big, literally, "the book the big")
Germanic,
Romance,
Celtic,
Semitic,
and
auxiliary languages generally have a definite article,
sometimes used as a postposition. Many other languages do not. Some
examples are Chinese,
Japanese,
Finnish,
and the Slavic
languages except Bulgarian
and Macedonian.
When necessary, languages of this kind may indicate definiteness by
other means such as Demonstratives.
It is common for definiteness to interact with
the marking of case in certain
syntactic contexts. In many languages direct
objects (DOs) receive distinctive marking only if they are
definite. For example in Turkish,
the DO in the sentence adamları gördüm (meaning "I saw the men") is
marked with the suffix -ı (indicating definiteness). The absence of
the suffix means that the DO is indefinite ("I saw men").
In Serbo-Croatian,
and to a lesser extent in Slovene,
definiteness can be expressed morphologically on prenominal
adjectives. The short form of the adjective is interpreted as
indefinite (nov grad "a new city"), while the long form is definite
and/or specific (novi grad "the new city, a certain new
city").
In Japanese,
a language which indicates noun functions with postpositions, the
topic marker (wa) may include definiteness. For example, "uma wa"
can mean "the horse", while "uma ga" can mean "a horse".
References
- http://rlv.revues.org/document351.html|accessdate=2007-03-30
- Hawkins, J.A. (1978) Definiteness and indefiniteness: a study in reference and grammaticality prediction. London:Croom Helm.
- Lyons, Christopher (1999) Definiteness. Cambridge University Press.
definiteness in Afrikaans: Bepaaldheid
definiteness in German: Definitheit
(Linguistik)
definiteness in Esperanto: Difiniteco
definiteness in Japanese: 定性