Standard instances of N-ellipsis in English are introduced by a limited set of determiner- and adjective-like elements (possessives, cardinal and ordinal numbers, other quantifiers). In the examples throughout this article, the ellipsis is indicated using a smaller font and subscripts, the element that introduces the ellipsis is in bold, and the antecedent to the ellipsis is underlined: ::When Susan brings her dog, Sam brings
his dog too. - N-ellipsis introduced by possessive ::Jill likes your story even though she hates '''Bill's'
story. - N-ellipsis introduced by possessive -s'' ::Because you bought two donuts, I bought
three donuts. - N-ellipsis introduced by
cardinal number ::I caught the first train before you caught the
second train. - N-ellipsis introduced by ordinal number ::Some school kids like syntax, and
some school kids don't. - N-ellipsis introduced by a quantifier ::Each student was helped so that
each student would understand. - N-ellipsis introduced by a quantifier The set of elements that can introduce N-ellipsis in English is limited. Similar quantificational elements, for instance, cannot introduce N-ellipsis: :: *No school kid likes syntax, and
no school kid likes semantics. - Failed attempt to introduce N-ellipsis with
no :: *Every student was helped, so that
every student would understand. - Failed attempt to introduce N-ellipsis with
every Most adjectives in English are also incapable of introducing N-ellipsis: :: *Fred watches stupid programs, but Jim watches
intelligent programs. - Failed attempt to introduce N-ellipsis with a standard adjective :: *I value long walks although I only get to take
short walks. - Failed attempt to introduce N-ellipsis with a standard adjective This aspect of N-ellipsis in English distinguishes English from other languages (e.g. German and Dutch), which are much more permissive; they allow most any determiner or adjective to introduce N-ellipsis. Note that English employs the indefinite pronoun
one to make such sentences acceptable, e.g.
Fred watches stupid programs, but Jim watches intelligent ones. The examples so far all have the ellipsis following its antecedent. The opposite arrangement is also possible: the N-ellipsis can precede its "antecedent": ::If he brings
his dog, I'll bring my dog too. - N-ellipsis preceding its "antecedent" ::Because he did the first
two problems, she is going to do that last three problems. - N-ellipsis preceding its "antecedent" ::Even though he skipped
one task, he did do the rest of the tasks. - N-ellipsis preceding its "antecedent" N-ellipsis behaves like standard personal pronouns in this area; personal pronouns can also precede their antecedents at times, e.g.
When he arrives, Bill immediately takes a shower. ==Systematic variation==