Step 1: Definition of determiner.
In grammar, determiners are words placed in front of nouns to specify reference, quantity, or definiteness.
Step 2: Common categories of determiners.
- Articles: definite (the), indefinite (a, an).
- Demonstratives: this, that, these, those.
- Possessors: my, your, his, her, their.
Step 3: Elimination.
Prepositions and postpositions are not determiners. Therefore, only Option (A) captures the correct set.
\[
\boxed{\text{Option (A) is correct.}}
\]
Consider the following two statements, S1 and S2 and choose the correct option.
S1: If X is an adjunct of Y, then Y is an argument of X because the presence of Y in a sentence is necessary for X to occur.
S2: It is not necessarily true that if Y is an argument of X, then X is Y's adjunct.
Given the sentences S1 and S2, choose the option that explains why S2 cannot be derived from S1.
S1: Deadpool was interested in Wolverine's description of morphosyntax.
S2: *What was Deadpool interested in Wolverine's description of?