“A daughter’s life”: the usage of the article












3















What else but sail to save a daughter's life,

and pray she still drew breath?




It seems to me that the article in bold is redundant. Why is it used in this text? Is it grammatically correct?










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    3















    What else but sail to save a daughter's life,

    and pray she still drew breath?




    It seems to me that the article in bold is redundant. Why is it used in this text? Is it grammatically correct?










    share|improve this question

























      3












      3








      3








      What else but sail to save a daughter's life,

      and pray she still drew breath?




      It seems to me that the article in bold is redundant. Why is it used in this text? Is it grammatically correct?










      share|improve this question














      What else but sail to save a daughter's life,

      and pray she still drew breath?




      It seems to me that the article in bold is redundant. Why is it used in this text? Is it grammatically correct?







      grammar articles indefinite-article






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











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      share|improve this question










      asked Dec 12 '18 at 16:22









      Aer

      19510




      19510






















          2 Answers
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          4














          It's the life of a daughter.



          The countably singular noun "daughter" needs some determiner, even with the genitive inflection. The indefinite article "a" is the determiner for "daughter", and in turn the genitive phrase "a daughter's" is the determiner for the countably singular "life".



          Nothing is redundant. Everything that needs counting is counted.






          share|improve this answer

















          • 1




            To further prove non-redundancy, let's point out that some article is needed no matter what, even if this particular article were not necessarily the right one for some different statement. "Save daughter's life" couldn't conceivably be correct, in English.
            – Beanluc
            Dec 12 '18 at 18:40



















          3














          Assuming the daughter is the writer's own daughter, the "a" would be incorrect in a strictly mundane grammar lesson on sentence structure. In that case, the sentence would be given as, ".. to save my daughter's life", even if the writer has more than one daughter.



          However in this case, by using the indefinite article "a", the author speaks of his own daughter in a general sense, as if she were the daughter of any person in that situation. He moves the context into a more philosophical, universally significant realm to emphasize the emotion which is shared by humanity in general. It makes the story more poignant and moving to the reader.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Thanks! This couplet is taken from the ballade about the admiral's life so the narrator is not the admiral.
            – Aer
            Dec 12 '18 at 17:34






          • 1




            @Aer In that case, the less poetic form would probably be "save his daughter's life" but otherwise Lorel's point still stands.
            – John Montgomery
            Dec 12 '18 at 20:26











          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          It's the life of a daughter.



          The countably singular noun "daughter" needs some determiner, even with the genitive inflection. The indefinite article "a" is the determiner for "daughter", and in turn the genitive phrase "a daughter's" is the determiner for the countably singular "life".



          Nothing is redundant. Everything that needs counting is counted.






          share|improve this answer

















          • 1




            To further prove non-redundancy, let's point out that some article is needed no matter what, even if this particular article were not necessarily the right one for some different statement. "Save daughter's life" couldn't conceivably be correct, in English.
            – Beanluc
            Dec 12 '18 at 18:40
















          4














          It's the life of a daughter.



          The countably singular noun "daughter" needs some determiner, even with the genitive inflection. The indefinite article "a" is the determiner for "daughter", and in turn the genitive phrase "a daughter's" is the determiner for the countably singular "life".



          Nothing is redundant. Everything that needs counting is counted.






          share|improve this answer

















          • 1




            To further prove non-redundancy, let's point out that some article is needed no matter what, even if this particular article were not necessarily the right one for some different statement. "Save daughter's life" couldn't conceivably be correct, in English.
            – Beanluc
            Dec 12 '18 at 18:40














          4












          4








          4






          It's the life of a daughter.



          The countably singular noun "daughter" needs some determiner, even with the genitive inflection. The indefinite article "a" is the determiner for "daughter", and in turn the genitive phrase "a daughter's" is the determiner for the countably singular "life".



          Nothing is redundant. Everything that needs counting is counted.






          share|improve this answer












          It's the life of a daughter.



          The countably singular noun "daughter" needs some determiner, even with the genitive inflection. The indefinite article "a" is the determiner for "daughter", and in turn the genitive phrase "a daughter's" is the determiner for the countably singular "life".



          Nothing is redundant. Everything that needs counting is counted.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 12 '18 at 16:33









          Gary Botnovcan

          8,909926




          8,909926








          • 1




            To further prove non-redundancy, let's point out that some article is needed no matter what, even if this particular article were not necessarily the right one for some different statement. "Save daughter's life" couldn't conceivably be correct, in English.
            – Beanluc
            Dec 12 '18 at 18:40














          • 1




            To further prove non-redundancy, let's point out that some article is needed no matter what, even if this particular article were not necessarily the right one for some different statement. "Save daughter's life" couldn't conceivably be correct, in English.
            – Beanluc
            Dec 12 '18 at 18:40








          1




          1




          To further prove non-redundancy, let's point out that some article is needed no matter what, even if this particular article were not necessarily the right one for some different statement. "Save daughter's life" couldn't conceivably be correct, in English.
          – Beanluc
          Dec 12 '18 at 18:40




          To further prove non-redundancy, let's point out that some article is needed no matter what, even if this particular article were not necessarily the right one for some different statement. "Save daughter's life" couldn't conceivably be correct, in English.
          – Beanluc
          Dec 12 '18 at 18:40













          3














          Assuming the daughter is the writer's own daughter, the "a" would be incorrect in a strictly mundane grammar lesson on sentence structure. In that case, the sentence would be given as, ".. to save my daughter's life", even if the writer has more than one daughter.



          However in this case, by using the indefinite article "a", the author speaks of his own daughter in a general sense, as if she were the daughter of any person in that situation. He moves the context into a more philosophical, universally significant realm to emphasize the emotion which is shared by humanity in general. It makes the story more poignant and moving to the reader.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Thanks! This couplet is taken from the ballade about the admiral's life so the narrator is not the admiral.
            – Aer
            Dec 12 '18 at 17:34






          • 1




            @Aer In that case, the less poetic form would probably be "save his daughter's life" but otherwise Lorel's point still stands.
            – John Montgomery
            Dec 12 '18 at 20:26
















          3














          Assuming the daughter is the writer's own daughter, the "a" would be incorrect in a strictly mundane grammar lesson on sentence structure. In that case, the sentence would be given as, ".. to save my daughter's life", even if the writer has more than one daughter.



          However in this case, by using the indefinite article "a", the author speaks of his own daughter in a general sense, as if she were the daughter of any person in that situation. He moves the context into a more philosophical, universally significant realm to emphasize the emotion which is shared by humanity in general. It makes the story more poignant and moving to the reader.






          share|improve this answer





















          • Thanks! This couplet is taken from the ballade about the admiral's life so the narrator is not the admiral.
            – Aer
            Dec 12 '18 at 17:34






          • 1




            @Aer In that case, the less poetic form would probably be "save his daughter's life" but otherwise Lorel's point still stands.
            – John Montgomery
            Dec 12 '18 at 20:26














          3












          3








          3






          Assuming the daughter is the writer's own daughter, the "a" would be incorrect in a strictly mundane grammar lesson on sentence structure. In that case, the sentence would be given as, ".. to save my daughter's life", even if the writer has more than one daughter.



          However in this case, by using the indefinite article "a", the author speaks of his own daughter in a general sense, as if she were the daughter of any person in that situation. He moves the context into a more philosophical, universally significant realm to emphasize the emotion which is shared by humanity in general. It makes the story more poignant and moving to the reader.






          share|improve this answer












          Assuming the daughter is the writer's own daughter, the "a" would be incorrect in a strictly mundane grammar lesson on sentence structure. In that case, the sentence would be given as, ".. to save my daughter's life", even if the writer has more than one daughter.



          However in this case, by using the indefinite article "a", the author speaks of his own daughter in a general sense, as if she were the daughter of any person in that situation. He moves the context into a more philosophical, universally significant realm to emphasize the emotion which is shared by humanity in general. It makes the story more poignant and moving to the reader.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 12 '18 at 16:45









          Lorel C.

          1,06525




          1,06525












          • Thanks! This couplet is taken from the ballade about the admiral's life so the narrator is not the admiral.
            – Aer
            Dec 12 '18 at 17:34






          • 1




            @Aer In that case, the less poetic form would probably be "save his daughter's life" but otherwise Lorel's point still stands.
            – John Montgomery
            Dec 12 '18 at 20:26


















          • Thanks! This couplet is taken from the ballade about the admiral's life so the narrator is not the admiral.
            – Aer
            Dec 12 '18 at 17:34






          • 1




            @Aer In that case, the less poetic form would probably be "save his daughter's life" but otherwise Lorel's point still stands.
            – John Montgomery
            Dec 12 '18 at 20:26
















          Thanks! This couplet is taken from the ballade about the admiral's life so the narrator is not the admiral.
          – Aer
          Dec 12 '18 at 17:34




          Thanks! This couplet is taken from the ballade about the admiral's life so the narrator is not the admiral.
          – Aer
          Dec 12 '18 at 17:34




          1




          1




          @Aer In that case, the less poetic form would probably be "save his daughter's life" but otherwise Lorel's point still stands.
          – John Montgomery
          Dec 12 '18 at 20:26




          @Aer In that case, the less poetic form would probably be "save his daughter's life" but otherwise Lorel's point still stands.
          – John Montgomery
          Dec 12 '18 at 20:26


















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