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    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")

    In contrast, the great majority of languages do not have a definite article. Some examples are Chinese, Japanese, Finnish, and all 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 (indicating definiteness). The absence of the suffix means that the DO is indefinite ("I saw men").

    In some languages (such as Croatian) adjectives have indefinite and definite forrm, the later used when the adjective identifies the entity. For example, in Moj konj je crn ("My horse is black") crn is in indefinite form, while in Udario me crni konj ("The black horse kicked me") the definite form crni is used.


        Definiteness
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Definiteness". link