D connects determiners to nouns.
+-D-+ | | The dog ranNouns have D-connectors conjoined with their main "S+ or O- or J-..." expression. The D-is listed first on the expression, since it must connect closer than the main connection: "I saw the dog", "*The I saw dog".
Many words can act as either determiners or noun-phrases: "some", "many", "all", "this", and a number of others. Such words have D- disjoined with the main "S+ or O-..." found on nouns:
many: Dmc+ or Sp+ or O-...;The first two subscript places on D connectors relate to number agreement. Consider the following simplified entries.
the: D+; a: Ds+; some: Dm+; many: Dmc+; much: Dmu+; dog: Ds- & ...; dogs: {Dmc-} & ...; water: {Dmu-} & ...; war: {D*u-} & ...;Essentially there are three categories of noun and determiner: singular, mass, and plural. The first subscript place distinguishes between singular ("s") and everything else ("m"); the second place distinguishes between plural ("c") and mass ("u") (for "countable" and "uncountable"). Nouns and articles which are singular-only have Ds; those which are plural-only have Dmc; those which are mass-only have Dmu; nouns which may be singular or mass have D*u-; determiners which may be plural or mass have Dm+; and determiners which may be mass, plural or singular have D+. (A few nouns, such as "fish", may be plural or singular; for these we create multiple dictionary entries.)
+--Dmcn-+ | | twenty cookiesAs explained above, the "m" subscript is for "multiple", the "c" subscript is for "count"; so "n" here indicates "numeric". This connector has essentially the same meaning as the ND numeric determiner. A future version may (or may not!) make one of these two links obsolete.
+-Ds**v-+ | | I ate an appleThe Ds**c connector will link only to nouns starting with a consonant:
+-Ds**c-+ | | I ate a pearThe Ds**x connector will link only to nouns that are preceeded by a modifier, thus invalidating the need for phonetic agreement. In this case the PH connector is used to force phonetic agreement.
+--Ds**x--+ | | I ate a green apple
?The new David Letterman is a happy, secure David Letterman. ?I bought a Toyota to carry my MacintoshThus we give proper nouns D- with cost 2. Note that in the first case the proper noun carries an adjective as well; this is also not uncommon in more colloquial writing. Thus proper nouns carry
[[{@A-} & {D-}]] & (Ss+ or O- or J-...)In giving proper nouns D- and A- connectors, we are essentially allowing them to be treated like common nouns. Other common-noun-like usages are not permitted: we do not allow proper nouns to act as plural forms or to take post-nominal modifiers such as prepositional phrases (but see "JG"). These usages do occasionally arise, however - with brand-names, for example. Some words for nations and religions, such as "American(s)" and "Muslim(s)", really seem like full-blown common nouns; thus they are included in ordinary common noun categories.
Other D subscripts relate to comparatives; see "MV: Comparatives", sections I (Dm*m) and VII (Dm*y). Dm*k and Ds*k relate to the construction "such...that"; see "EAxk: so...that".