Exercise 1, p. 362

1. Normally no article is used with names of people as they

point out individuals, so the proper nouns Peter (first name),

Carl (middle name) and Faberge (surname) are used without

articles.

2 and 7. These are cases of a metonymic transfer. In these

sentences the names of the famous jeweller (Faberge) and

painters (Levitan and Aivazovsky) are used to denote their works

and thus become common countable nouns. As such they must

be used with articles. The indefinite classifying article is used,

because the works of art in both sentences are mentioned for

the first time.

3. No article is used if the name of a person is modified by the

descriptive attribute little. The same rule applies to big, dear,

poor, lucky, old, young, honest, pretty and some others because

they form a part of the name they precede.

4. Big Ben and the Tower are proper names denoting buildings.

The use of articles with names of important buildings varies

from name to name and largely depends on tradition. Most of

them take no article but there are quite a few exceptions which

should be memorized.

5. Here tower is a common noun used in a set phrase with the

classifying indefinite article.

6. In the first clause of this compound sentence “the city” is

a common noun. It is used with the definite article in its specifying

function because it is clear from the context that the city in

question is London. In the second clause of the sentence “the

 

 

City” is a proper name. The use of the definite article here is

based on tradition.

8, 10, 15, 16. These are clear cases of a metonymic transfer.

Names of companies usually take no article but here Sony,

Panasonic, Ford, Adidas, Nike and Chanel denote not the manufacturing

companies but items produced by them. As such they

are countable and can take articles including the classifying

indefinite article as in these sentences.

9. There is a legend that the popular nickname for

Academy Awards which were first conferred by the US-based

Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1929 for

excellence in acting, directing, writing screenplays and other

aspects of film production stuck to the gilted statuette in the

following way. One of the Academy’s employees, a Margaret

Merrick looked at one of the first statuettes and said, “Why

he looks just like my uncle Oscar!” Thus as a result o f

a metonymic transfer the Academy Awards came to be known

as Oscars. This is a common count noun which takes articles

and has a regular plural.

11. Heniy Ford is a personal name. Generally such names

take no articles and this is just the case.

12 and 13. These are clear cases of a metonymic transfer.

Names of persons become countable common nouns indicating

typical features associated with those names. In sentence

12 the indefinite article is used because the speaker

evidently does not think the boy or young man in question

unique. In sentence 13 the definite article is used because

everybody seems to believe the singer a unique phenomenon.

14. This is another case of a metonymic transfer. The characteristic

qualities of the proverbial Jack-of-call-trades are meant,

so the name becomes a count noun.

17. The definite article is used with the surname in the plural

to indicate the whole family.

18. If a name is preceded by Mr., Mrs. or Miss, the use of the

indefinite article implies that the speaker doesn’t know this

person.

19. See 17 for the Benois. The indefinite article is used before

the name Benois to indicate that one of a family is meant.

 

20. The definite article is used with the name of a person

modified by descriptive attributes as the limitation is clear from

the context.

21. In the second sentence the name is just that - a personal

name indicating the bearer of the name, so no article is used. In

the first sentence the characteristic qualities of the Cora in question

are meant, and it becomes a countable common noun in

the plural.

22. The name is modified by a descriptive attribute and is the

center of communication, so the indefinite article is used.