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English possessive

In English, possessive words or phrases exist for nouns and most pronouns, as well as some noun phrases. These can play the roles of determiners (also called possessive adjectives when corresponding to a pronoun) or of nouns.

For nouns, noun phrases, and some pronouns, the possessive is generally formed with the suffix -'s, but in some cases just with the addition of an apostrophe to an existing s. This form is sometimes called the Saxon genitive, reflecting the suffix's derivation from Old English.[1] Personal pronouns, however, have irregular possessives, and most of them have different forms for possessive determiners and possessive pronouns, such as my and mine or your and yours.

Possessives are one of the means by which genitive constructions are formed in modern English, the other principal one being the use of the preposition of. It is sometimes stated that the possessives represent a grammatical case, called the genitive or possessive case, though some linguists do not accept this view, regarding the 's ending, variously, as a phrasal affix, an edge affix, or a clitic, rather than as a case ending.

Formation of possessive construction edit

Nouns and noun phrases edit

The possessive form of an English noun, or more generally a noun phrase, is made by suffixing a morpheme which is represented orthographically as 's (the letter s preceded by an apostrophe), and is pronounced in the same way as the regular English plural ending (e)s: namely as /ɪz/ when following a sibilant sound (/s/, /z/, /ʃ/, /ʒ/, /tʃ/ or /dʒ/), as /s/ when following any other voiceless consonant (/p/, /t/, /k/, /f/ or /θ/), and as /z/ otherwise. For example:

  • Mitch /mɪtʃ/ has the possessive Mitch's /ˈmɪɪz/
  • luck /lʌk/ has the possessive luck's /lʌks/
  • man /mæn/ has the singular possessive man's /mænz/ and the plural possessive men's

Note the distinction from the plural in nouns whose plural is irregular: man's vs. men, wife's vs. wives, etc.

In the case of plural nouns ending in -s, the possessive is spelled by only adding an apostrophe and is pronounced the same (for example: Peasants' Revolt). In the case of singular nouns ending in -s (or -z in another sibilant -z or -x sound; or -se, -ze, -ce or -xe. Example, Verreaux's eagle),[citation needed] the possessive was traditionally[2] also spelled by adding only an apostrophe (despite often being pronounced differently):

  • the possessive of cats is cats', both words being pronounced /kæts/
  • the possessive of James can be spelled James's and pronounced -/zɪz/, but the possessive of Jesus is often spelled adding only an apostrophe (Jesus') and is and was usually pronounced the same (/ˈdʒiːzəs/).

Singular nouns ending in s can also form a possessive regularly by adding 's, as in Charles's /ˈɑːrlzɪz/ or boss's. The Chicago Manual of Style recommends this style, while stating that adding just an apostrophe (e.g. Jesus') is also correct.[3] The Associated Press Stylebook recommends the s's style for nouns other than proper nouns, but only if the following word does not begin with s.[2] The Elements of Style and the Canadian Press Stylebook prefer the form of s's with the exception of Biblical and classical proper names (Jesus' teachings, Augustus' guards) and common phrases that do not take the extra syllabic s (e.g. "for goodness' sake").[4][5] For more on style guidance for this and other issues relating to the construction of possessives in English, see possessive apostrophe.

More generally, the 's morpheme can be attached to the last word of a noun phrase, even if the head noun does not end the phrase. For example, the phrase the king of Spain can form the possessive the king of Spain's, and – in informal style – the phrase the man we saw yesterday can form the man we saw yesterday's. Both John's and Laura's house and John and Laura's house are correct, though the latter is more common, especially in idiomatic speech. See § Status of the possessive as a grammatical case below.

Scientific terminology, in particular the Latin names for stars, uses the Latin genitive form of the name of the constellation; thus, Alpha Centauri, where Centauri is the genitive of constellation name Centaurus.

Pronouns edit

Unlike other noun phrases which only have a single possessive form, personal pronouns in English have two possessive forms: possessive determiners (used to form noun phrases such as "her success") and possessive pronouns (used in place of nouns either as an object, as in "I prefer hers", or as a predicate pronoun, as in "the success was hers"). In most cases these are different from each other.

For example, the pronoun I has possessive determiner my and possessive pronoun mine; you has your and yours; he has his for both; she has her and hers; it has its for both; we has our and ours; they has their and theirs. The archaic thou has thy and thine. For a full table and further details, see English personal pronouns.

Note that possessive its has no apostrophe, although it is sometimes written with one in error (see hypercorrection) by confusion with the common possessive ending -'s and the contraction it's used for it is and it has. Possessive its was originally formed with an apostrophe in the 17th century, but it had been dropped by the early 19th century, presumably to make it more similar to the other personal pronoun possessives.[6]

The interrogative and relative pronoun who has the possessive whose. In its relative use, whose can also refer to inanimate antecedents, but its interrogative use always refers to persons.[7]

Other pronouns that form possessives (mainly indefinite pronouns) do so in the same way as nouns, with 's, for example one's, somebody's (and somebody else's). Certain pronouns, such as the common demonstratives this, that, these, and those, do not form their possessives using 's, and of this, of that, etc., are used instead.

English possessive pronouns agree with the gender of their antecedent or referent, while, in other languages, such as Italian, the possessive pronoun agrees with the gender of the head noun of the NP in which it appears. Compare he loved his mother, in which his is masculine in agreement with he to ama sua madre, in which sua is feminine in agreement with madre (mother).

Syntactic functions of possessive words or phrases edit

English possessives play two principal roles in syntax:

  • the role of possessive determiners (more popularly called possessive adjectives; see Possessive § Terminology) standing before a noun, as in my house or John's two sisters;
  • the role of possessive pronouns (although they may not always be called that), standing independently in place of a noun, as in mine is large; they prefer John's.

As determiners edit

Possessive noun phrases such as "John's" can be used as determiners. When a form corresponding to a personal pronoun is used as a possessive determiner, the correct form must be used, as described above (my rather than mine, etc.).

Possessive determiners are not used in combination with articles or other definite determiners. For example, it is not correct to say *the my hat,[a] *a my hat or *this my hat; an alternative is provided in the last two cases by the "double genitive" as described in the following section – a hat of mine (also one of my hats), this hat of mine. Possessive determiners can nonetheless be combined with certain quantifiers, as in my six hats (which differs in meaning from six of my hats). See English determiners for more details.

A possessive adjective can be intensified with the word own, which can itself be either an adjective or a pronoun: my own (bed), John's own (bed).

In some expressions the possessive has itself taken on the role of a noun modifier, as in cow's milk (used rather than cow milk). It then no longer functions as a determiner; adjectives and determiners can be placed before it, as in the warm cow's milk, where idiomatically the and warm now refer to the milk, not to the cow.

Possessive relationships can also be expressed periphrastically, by preceding the noun or noun phrase with the preposition of, although possessives are usually more idiomatic where a true relationship of possession is involved. Some examples:

  • the child's bag might also be expressed as the bag of the child
  • our cats' mother might be expressed as the mother of our cats
  • the system's failure might be expressed as the failure of the system

Another alternative in the last case may be the system failure, using system as a noun adjunct rather than a possessive – this is common when the possessor is more abstract in character.

As pronouns edit

Possessives can also play the role of nouns or pronouns; namely they can stand alone as a noun phrase, without qualifying a noun. In this role they can function as the subject or object of verbs, or as a complement of prepositions. When a form corresponding to a personal pronoun is used in this role, the correct form must be used, as described above (mine rather than my, etc.).

Examples:

  • I'll do my work, and you do yours. (here yours is a possessive pronoun, meaning "your work", and standing as the object of the verb do)
  • My car is old, Mary's is new. (here Mary's means "Mary's car" and stands as the subject of its clause)
  • Your house is nice, but I prefer to stay in mine. (here mine means "my house", and is the complement of the preposition in)

Double genitive edit

The genitive can be combined with an of construction to produce what is often called a double genitive, as in the following examples:

Some object to the name double genitive because the "of" clause is not a genitive. Alternative names are "oblique genitive",[9] "post-genitive",[10] "cumulative genitive", "pleonastic genitive",[11][12] and "double possessive".[13]

Some writers have stigmatized this usage.[13][14] However, it has a history in careful English. "Moreover, in some sentences the double genitive offers the only way to express what is meant. There is no substitute for it in a sentence such as That's the only friend of yours that I've ever met, since sentences such as That's your only friend that I've ever met and That's your only friend, whom I've ever met are not grammatical."[15] Cf. "That's the only one of your friends that I've ever met" "[T]he construction is confined to human referents: compare a friend of the Gallery / no fault of the Gallery."[16]

The Oxford English Dictionary says that this usage was "Originally partitive, but subseq[uently became a] ... simple possessive ... or as equivalent to an appositive phrase ...".[17]

Nested possessive edit

Because a possessive is itself a determiner phrase, possessives can be nested arbitrarily deep, as in Lincoln's Doctor's Dog or *John's friend's mother's ... lawyer's brother.[18]: 178 

Subject complements edit

When they are used as subject complements, as in this is mine and that pen is John's, the intended sense may be either that of a predicate pronoun or of a predicate adjective; however, their form (mine, yours, etc.) in this case is the same as that used in other sentences for possessive pronouns.

Use of whose edit

The following sentences illustrate the uses of whose:

  • As the possessive of interrogative who: Whose pen is this? Whose do you prefer? For whose good are we doing it?
  • As the possessive of relative who (normally only as determiner, not pronoun): There is the man whose pen we broke. She is the woman in whose garden we found you.
  • As the possessive of relative which (again, normally only as determiner): It is an idea whose time has come (preferably to ...of which the time has come).

Semantics edit

Possessives, as well as their synonymous constructions with of, express a range of relationships that are not limited strictly to possession in the sense of ownership. Some discussion of such relationships can be found at Possession (linguistics) and at Possessive § Semantics. Some points as they relate specifically to English are discussed below.

Actions edit

When possessives are used with a verbal noun or other noun expressing an action, the possessive may represent either the doer of the action (the subject of the corresponding verb) or the undergoer of the action (the object of the verb). The same applies to of phrases. When a possessive and an of phrase are used with the same action noun, the former generally represents the subject and the latter the object. For example:

  • Fred's dancing (or the dancing of Fred) – Fred is the dancer (only possible meaning with this verb)
  • the proposal's rejection or the rejection of the proposal – the proposal is rejected
  • Fred's rejection of the proposal – Fred is the rejecter, the proposal is rejected

When a gerundive phrase acts as the object of a verb or preposition, the agent/subject of the gerund may be possessive or not, reflecting two different but equally valid interpretations of the phrase's structure:

  • I object to Ralph destroying the barn. (Ralph is the subject of the gerundive verb "destroying".)
  • I object to Ralph's destroying the barn. (Ralph is the genitive of the verbal noun "destroying".)

Time periods edit

Time periods are sometimes put into possessive form, to express the duration of or time associated with the modified noun:

  • the Hundred Years' War
  • a day's pay
  • two weeks' notice

The paraphrase with of is often un-idiomatic or ambiguous in these cases.

Expressing for edit

Sometimes the possessive expresses for whom something is intended, rather than to whom it physically belongs:

  • women's shoes
  • children's literature

These cases would be paraphrased with for rather than of (shoes for women).

Appositive genitive edit

Sometimes genitive constructions are used to express a noun in apposition to the main one, as in the Isle of Man, the problem of drug abuse. This may be occasionally be done with a possessive (as in Dublin's fair city, for the fair city of Dublin), but this is a rare usage.[19]

History edit

The 's clitic originated in Old English as an inflexional suffix marking genitive case. In the modern language, it can often be attached to the end of an entire phrase (as in "The king of Spain's wife" or "The man whom you met yesterday's bicycle"). As a result, it is normally viewed by linguists as a clitic – that is, a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a word, but depends phonologically on another word or phrase.[20]

An identical form of the clitic exists in the North Germanic languages, and in the North Frisian sister language of Old English. But the accepted linguistic history of the clitic possessive in these languages is very different.

In Old English, -es was the ending of the genitive singular of most strong declension nouns and the masculine and neuter genitive singular of strong adjectives. The ending -e was used for strong nouns with Germanic ō-stems, which constituted most of the feminine strong nouns, and for the feminine genitive singular form of strong adjectives.[21]

Gender Singular Plural
Strong masculine -es -a
feminine -e -a
neuter -es -a
Weak m. / f. / n. -an -ena

In Middle English the es ending was generalised to the genitive of all strong declension nouns. By the sixteenth century, the remaining strong declension endings were generalized to all nouns. The spelling es remained, but in many words the letter e no longer represented a sound. In those words, printers often copied the French practice of substituting an apostrophe for the letter e. In later use, 's was used for all nouns where the /s/ sound was used for the possessive form, and when adding 's to a word like love the e was no longer omitted. The 's form was also used for plural noun forms. These were derived from the strong declension as ending in Old English. In Middle English, the spelling was changed to -es, reflecting a change in pronunciation, and extended to all cases of the plural, including the genitive. Later conventions removed the apostrophe from subjective and objective case forms and added it after the s in possessive case forms. See Apostrophe: Historical development

 
A bookplate of 1693, using "his"

In the Early Modern English of 1580 to 1620 it was sometimes spelled as "his" as a folk etymology, e.g. "St. James his park"; see his genitive.

The verse Genesis 9:6 shows the development. The Wycliffe Bible (1395) contains the word "mannus" ("Who euere schedith out mannus blood, his blood schal be sched; for man is maad to the ymage of God.").[22] In the original King James Bible (1611) there is "mans" ("Who so sheddeth mans blood, by man shall his blood be shed: for in the image of God made he man.").[23] In the plural, the 1611 King James has mens, but the older Wycliffe Bible uses of men.

Another remnant of the Old English genitive is the adverbial genitive, where the ending s (without apostrophe) forms adverbs of time: nowadays, closed Sundays. There is a literary periphrastic form using of, as in of a summer day.[24] There are also forms in -ce, from genitives of number and place: once, twice, thrice; whence, hence, thence.

There is also the "genitive of measure": forms such as "a five-mile journey" and "a ten-foot pole" use what is actually a remnant of the Old English genitive plural which, ending in /a/, had neither the final /s/ nor underwent the foot/feet vowel mutation of the nominative plural. In essence, the underlying forms are "a five of miles (O.E. gen. pl. mīla) journey" and "a ten of feet (O.E. gen. pl. fōta) pole".[25]

Status of the possessive as a grammatical case edit

Historically, the possessive morpheme represented by 's was a case marker, as noted in the previous section, and the modern English possessive can also be analysed as a grammatical case, called the "possessive case" or "genitive case". However, it differs from the noun inflection of languages such as German, in that in phrases like the king of England's horse the ending is separated from the head noun (king) and attaches to the last word of the phrase. To account for this, the possessive can be analysed, for instance, as a clitic construction (an "enclitic postposition") or as an inflection of the last word of a phrase ("edge inflection"). (The form the king's horse of England was the correct form in old times,[when?] but not now.)

For instance,

  • The Oxford English Grammar, under the heading "Case", states "In speech the genitive is signalled in singular nouns by an inflection that has the same pronunciation variants as for plural nouns in the common case."[26]
  • A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language, under the heading "The forms of the genitive inflection", similarly refers to the "genitive inflection with regular and irregular plurals",[27] but later – especially with regard to the "group genitive" – revises this to clarify that the -s ending is not a case ending as in German or Latin but is "more appropriately described as an enclitic postposition".[28]
  • The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language discusses the possessive in greater detail, taking account of group (or phrasal) genitives like the King of England's and somebody else's and analyses the construction as an inflection of the final word of the phrase (as opposed to the head word). The discussion in support of this inflectional analysis includes:
    • the personal pronouns, where "no other analysis is possible",
    • the fact that the genitive 's cannot stand alone, unlike 'm in I'm, which can be expanded to am
    • the varying form of the genitive suffix (/ɪz/, /z/, /s/) depending on "the phonological properties of the base to which it attaches"
    • the sensitivity of the genitive formation to the internal morphological structure of the noun.[29]

Other views are (1) that the possessive can be regarded as having elements of an affix and elements of a clitic, which are seen as idealized categories, and (2) that the possessive form can be an affix or a clitic, but only one of the two in any given example.[30][31]

Notes edit

  1. ^ This article uses asterisks to indicate ungrammatical examples.

References edit

  1. ^ McArthur, Roshan; McArthur, Thomas Burns (2005). Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. Oxford University Press. Saxon Genitive. ISBN 9780192806376.
  2. ^ a b Yin, Karen (2011). "Apostrophe-S vs. Apostrophe: Forming Possessives of Words Ending in S". AP vs. Chicago. from the original on 2020-11-12. Retrieved 2020-12-28.
  3. ^ "The Chicago Manual of Style, 17th Edition". The Chicago Manual of Style Online.
  4. ^ The Elements of Style
  5. ^ The Canadian Press Stylebook, 14th Edition. ISBN 978-0-920009-42-0.
  6. ^ "its – Origin and meaning of its by Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com.
  7. ^ Fowler, H.W. (2015). Butterfield, Jeremy (ed.). Fowler's Dictionary of Modern English Usage. Oxford University Press. p. 887. ISBN 978-0-19-966135-0.
  8. ^ Fowler, Henry W.; Burchfield, R.W. (2000). "double possessive". The New Fowler's Modern English Usage (revised third ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 227. ISBN 01-9860-263-4.
  9. ^ Huddleston, Rodney; Pullum, Geoffrey K. (2002). "5: Nouns and noun phrases § 16.3 Type III". The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 468–9. ISBN 05-2143-146-8.
  10. ^ Quirk, Randolph; Greenbaum, Sidney; Leech, Geoffrey; Svartik, Jan (1985). A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. Longman. p. 330.
  11. ^ "'double-possessive' tag wiki". english.stackexchange.com.
  12. ^ Henry Sweet (1898). "§2014". A New English Grammar: Logical and Historical. Vol. II. Clarendon Press. p. 75.
  13. ^ a b Garner, Bryan A. (2016). Garner's Modern English Usage (4th ed.). p. 713. ISBN 978-0-19-049148-2.
  14. ^ Quinion, Michael. "Double Possessive". World Wide Words. Retrieved 2009-05-19.
  15. ^ . 7 June 2008. Archived from the original on 7 June 2008.
  16. ^ page 162 under the heading double genitive in Pam Peters (2004). The Cambridge Guide to English Usage. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-62181-X.
  17. ^ "of XIII.44". The Oxford English Dictionary. Vol. 10 (2 ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1989. p. 715. ISBN 01-9861-186-2.
  18. ^ Barker, Chris (2019). "6. Possessives and relational nouns". In Paul Portner; Klaus Heusinger; Claudia Maienborn (eds.). Semantics - Noun Phrases and Verb Phrases. De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 177–203. doi:10.1515/9783110589443-006. ISBN 9783110589443. S2CID 11447167.
  19. ^ Quirk, Randolph; Greenbaum, Sidney; Leech, Geoffrey; Svartvik, Jan (1985). "§ 5.116 note [b]". A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. London and New York: Longman. p. 322. ISBN 0-582-51734-6.
  20. ^ English Possessive ’s: Clitic and Affix linguisticsociety.org
  21. ^ Campbell, A. Old English Grammar. Oxford University Press. Oxford 1959. Chapter IX
  22. ^ "The Wycliffe Bible, Genesis 9".
  23. ^ "Genesis Chapter 9, 1611 King James Bible".
  24. ^ "adverbial genitive". Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage. Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster. 1994. pp. 35–6. ISBN 978-0-87779-132-4. Retrieved 2009-05-16. Also see entry of.3 page 680.
  25. ^ The Origins and Development of the English Language, Volume 1, John Algeo, Thomas Pyles Cengage Learning, 2009, p 96
  26. ^ Greenbaum, Sidney (1996). The Oxford English Grammar. Oxford University Press. pp. 109–110. ISBN 0-19-861250-8. In speech the genitive is signalled in singular nouns by an inflection that has the same pronunciation variants as for plural nouns in the common case
  27. ^ Quirk, Randolph; Greenbaum, Sidney; Leech, Geoffrey; Svartik, Jan (1985). A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. Longman. p. 319. In writing, the inflection of regular nouns is realized in the singular by apostrophe + s (boy's), and in the regular plural by the apostrophe following the plural s (boys')
  28. ^ Quirk, Randolph; Greenbaum, Sidney; Leech, Geoffrey; Svartvik, Jan (1985). A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language. Harlow: Longman. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-582-51734-9.
  29. ^ Payne, John; Huddleston, Rodney (2002). "Nouns and noun phrases". In Huddleston, Rodney; Pullum, Geoffrey (eds.). The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 479–481. ISBN 0-521-43146-8. We conclude that both head and phrasal genitives involve case inflection. With head genitives it is always a noun that inflects, while the phrasal genitive can apply to words of most classes.
  30. ^ Hudson, Richard (2013). "A cognitive analysis of John's hat". In Börjars, Kersti; Denison, David; Scott, Alan (eds.). Morphosyntactic Categories and the Expression of Possession. John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp. 123–148. ISBN 9789027273000.
  31. ^ Börjars, Kersti; Denison, David; Krajewski, Grzegorz; Scott, Alan (2013). "Expression of Possession in English". In Börjars, Kersti; Denison, David; Scott, Alan (eds.). Morphosyntactic Categories and the Expression of Possession. John Benjamins Publishing Company. pp. 149–176. ISBN 9789027273000.

External links edit

  • Using the possessive in English A guide for learners of English

english, possessive, english, possessive, words, phrases, exist, nouns, most, pronouns, well, some, noun, phrases, these, play, roles, determiners, also, called, possessive, adjectives, when, corresponding, pronoun, nouns, nouns, noun, phrases, some, pronouns,. In English possessive words or phrases exist for nouns and most pronouns as well as some noun phrases These can play the roles of determiners also called possessive adjectives when corresponding to a pronoun or of nouns For nouns noun phrases and some pronouns the possessive is generally formed with the suffix s but in some cases just with the addition of an apostrophe to an existing s This form is sometimes called the Saxon genitive reflecting the suffix s derivation from Old English 1 Personal pronouns however have irregular possessives and most of them have different forms for possessive determiners and possessive pronouns such as my and mine or your and yours Possessives are one of the means by which genitive constructions are formed in modern English the other principal one being the use of the preposition of It is sometimes stated that the possessives represent a grammatical case called the genitive or possessive case though some linguists do not accept this view regarding the s ending variously as a phrasal affix an edge affix or a clitic rather than as a case ending Contents 1 Formation of possessive construction 1 1 Nouns and noun phrases 1 2 Pronouns 2 Syntactic functions of possessive words or phrases 2 1 As determiners 2 2 As pronouns 2 3 Double genitive 2 4 Nested possessive 2 5 Subject complements 2 6 Use of whose 3 Semantics 3 1 Actions 3 2 Time periods 3 3 Expressing for 3 4 Appositive genitive 4 History 5 Status of the possessive as a grammatical case 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksFormation of possessive construction editNouns and noun phrases edit The possessive form of an English noun or more generally a noun phrase is made by suffixing a morpheme which is represented orthographically as s the letter s preceded by an apostrophe and is pronounced in the same way as the regular English plural ending e s namely as ɪ z when following a sibilant sound s z ʃ ʒ tʃ or dʒ as s when following any other voiceless consonant p t k f or 8 and as z otherwise For example Mitch mɪtʃ has the possessive Mitch s ˈ m ɪ tʃ ɪ z luck lʌk has the possessive luck s lʌks man maen has the singular possessive man s maenz and the plural possessive men sNote the distinction from the plural in nouns whose plural is irregular man s vs men wife s vs wives etc In the case of plural nouns ending in s the possessive is spelled by only adding an apostrophe and is pronounced the same for example Peasants Revolt In the case of singular nouns ending in s or z in another sibilant z or x sound or se ze ce or xe Example Verreaux s eagle citation needed the possessive was traditionally 2 also spelled by adding only an apostrophe despite often being pronounced differently the possessive of cats is cats both words being pronounced kaets the possessive of James can be spelled James s and pronounced z ɪ z but the possessive of Jesus is often spelled adding only an apostrophe Jesus and is and was usually pronounced the same ˈdʒiːzes Singular nouns ending in s can also form a possessive regularly by adding s as in Charles s ˈ tʃ ɑːr l z ɪ z or boss s The Chicago Manual of Style recommends this style while stating that adding just an apostrophe e g Jesus is also correct 3 The Associated Press Stylebook recommends the s s style for nouns other than proper nouns but only if the following word does not begin with s 2 The Elements of Style and the Canadian Press Stylebook prefer the form of s s with the exception of Biblical and classical proper names Jesus teachings Augustus guards and common phrases that do not take the extra syllabic s e g for goodness sake 4 5 For more on style guidance for this and other issues relating to the construction of possessives in English see possessive apostrophe More generally the s morpheme can be attached to the last word of a noun phrase even if the head noun does not end the phrase For example the phrase the king of Spain can form the possessive the king of Spain s and in informal style the phrase the man we saw yesterday can form the man we saw yesterday s Both John s and Laura s house and John and Laura s house are correct though the latter is more common especially in idiomatic speech See Status of the possessive as a grammatical case below Scientific terminology in particular the Latin names for stars uses the Latin genitive form of the name of the constellation thus Alpha Centauri where Centauri is the genitive of constellation name Centaurus Pronouns edit Unlike other noun phrases which only have a single possessive form personal pronouns in English have two possessive forms possessive determiners used to form noun phrases such as her success and possessive pronouns used in place of nouns either as an object as in I prefer hers or as a predicate pronoun as in the success was hers In most cases these are different from each other For example the pronoun I has possessive determiner my and possessive pronoun mine you has your and yours he has his for both she has her and hers it has its for both we has our and ours they has their and theirs The archaic thou has thy and thine For a full table and further details see English personal pronouns Note that possessive its has no apostrophe although it is sometimes written with one in error see hypercorrection by confusion with the common possessive ending s and the contraction it s used for it is and it has Possessive its was originally formed with an apostrophe in the 17th century but it had been dropped by the early 19th century presumably to make it more similar to the other personal pronoun possessives 6 The interrogative and relative pronoun who has the possessive whose In its relative use whose can also refer to inanimate antecedents but its interrogative use always refers to persons 7 Other pronouns that form possessives mainly indefinite pronouns do so in the same way as nouns with s for example one s somebody s and somebody else s Certain pronouns such as the common demonstratives this that these and those do not form their possessives using s and of this of that etc are used instead English possessive pronouns agree with the gender of their antecedent or referent while in other languages such as Italian the possessive pronoun agrees with the gender of the head noun of the NP in which it appears Compare he loved his mother in which his is masculine in agreement with he to ama sua madre in which sua is feminine in agreement with madre mother Syntactic functions of possessive words or phrases editEnglish possessives play two principal roles in syntax the role of possessive determiners more popularly called possessive adjectives see Possessive Terminology standing before a noun as in my house or John s two sisters the role of possessive pronouns although they may not always be called that standing independently in place of a noun as in mine is large they prefer John s As determiners edit Possessive noun phrases such as John s can be used as determiners When a form corresponding to a personal pronoun is used as a possessive determiner the correct form must be used as described above my rather than mine etc Possessive determiners are not used in combination with articles or other definite determiners For example it is not correct to say the my hat a a my hat or this my hat an alternative is provided in the last two cases by the double genitive as described in the following section a hat of mine also one of my hats this hat of mine Possessive determiners can nonetheless be combined with certain quantifiers as in my six hats which differs in meaning from six of my hats See English determiners for more details A possessive adjective can be intensified with the word own which can itself be either an adjective or a pronoun my own bed John s own bed In some expressions the possessive has itself taken on the role of a noun modifier as in cow s milk used rather than cow milk It then no longer functions as a determiner adjectives and determiners can be placed before it as in the warm cow s milk where idiomatically the and warm now refer to the milk not to the cow Possessive relationships can also be expressed periphrastically by preceding the noun or noun phrase with the preposition of although possessives are usually more idiomatic where a true relationship of possession is involved Some examples the child s bag might also be expressed as the bag of the child our cats mother might be expressed as the mother of our cats the system s failure might be expressed as the failure of the systemAnother alternative in the last case may be the system failure using system as a noun adjunct rather than a possessive this is common when the possessor is more abstract in character As pronouns edit Possessives can also play the role of nouns or pronouns namely they can stand alone as a noun phrase without qualifying a noun In this role they can function as the subject or object of verbs or as a complement of prepositions When a form corresponding to a personal pronoun is used in this role the correct form must be used as described above mine rather than my etc Examples I ll do my work and you do yours here yours is a possessive pronoun meaning your work and standing as the object of the verb do My car is old Mary s is new here Mary s means Mary s car and stands as the subject of its clause Your house is nice but I prefer to stay in mine here mine means my house and is the complement of the preposition in Double genitive edit See also Pleonasm Types of syntactic pleonasm The genitive can be combined with an of construction to produce what is often called a double genitive as in the following examples that hard heart of thine Venus and Adonis line 500 this extreme exactness of his Sterne Tristram Shandy chapter 1 IV that poor mother of mine Thackeray Barry Lyndon chapter I and uses of the title Mother of Mine Any Friend of Nicholas Nickleby s is a Friend of Mine and frequent uses of the title Friend of Mine a picture of the king s that is a picture owned by the king as distinct from a picture of the king a picture in which the king is portrayed 8 Some object to the name double genitive because the of clause is not a genitive Alternative names are oblique genitive 9 post genitive 10 cumulative genitive pleonastic genitive 11 12 and double possessive 13 Some writers have stigmatized this usage 13 14 However it has a history in careful English Moreover in some sentences the double genitive offers the only way to express what is meant There is no substitute for it in a sentence such as That s the only friend of yours that I ve ever met since sentences such as That s your only friend that I ve ever met and That s your only friend whom I ve ever met are not grammatical 15 Cf That s the only one of your friends that I ve ever met T he construction is confined to human referents compare a friend of the Gallery no fault of the Gallery 16 The Oxford English Dictionary says that this usage was Originally partitive but subseq uently became a simple possessive or as equivalent to an appositive phrase 17 Nested possessive edit Because a possessive is itself a determiner phrase possessives can be nested arbitrarily deep as in Lincoln s Doctor s Dog or John s friend s mother s lawyer s brother 18 178 Subject complements edit When they are used as subject complements as in this is mine and that pen is John s the intended sense may be either that of a predicate pronoun or of a predicate adjective however their form mine yours etc in this case is the same as that used in other sentences for possessive pronouns Use of whose edit The following sentences illustrate the uses of whose As the possessive of interrogative who Whose pen is this Whose do you prefer For whose good are we doing it As the possessive of relative who normally only as determiner not pronoun There is the man whose pen we broke She is the woman in whose garden we found you As the possessive of relative which again normally only as determiner It is an idea whose time has come preferably to of which the time has come Semantics editPossessives as well as their synonymous constructions with of express a range of relationships that are not limited strictly to possession in the sense of ownership Some discussion of such relationships can be found at Possession linguistics and at Possessive Semantics Some points as they relate specifically to English are discussed below Actions edit When possessives are used with a verbal noun or other noun expressing an action the possessive may represent either the doer of the action the subject of the corresponding verb or the undergoer of the action the object of the verb The same applies to of phrases When a possessive and an of phrase are used with the same action noun the former generally represents the subject and the latter the object For example Fred s dancing or the dancing of Fred Fred is the dancer only possible meaning with this verb the proposal s rejection or the rejection of the proposal the proposal is rejected Fred s rejection of the proposal Fred is the rejecter the proposal is rejectedWhen a gerundive phrase acts as the object of a verb or preposition the agent subject of the gerund may be possessive or not reflecting two different but equally valid interpretations of the phrase s structure I object to Ralph destroying the barn Ralph is the subject of the gerundive verb destroying I object to Ralph s destroying the barn Ralph is the genitive of the verbal noun destroying Time periods edit Time periods are sometimes put into possessive form to express the duration of or time associated with the modified noun the Hundred Years War a day s pay two weeks noticeThe paraphrase with of is often un idiomatic or ambiguous in these cases Expressing for edit Sometimes the possessive expresses for whom something is intended rather than to whom it physically belongs women s shoes children s literatureThese cases would be paraphrased with for rather than of shoes for women Appositive genitive edit Sometimes genitive constructions are used to express a noun in apposition to the main one as in the Isle of Man the problem of drug abuse This may be occasionally be done with a possessive as in Dublin s fair city for the fair city of Dublin but this is a rare usage 19 History editThe s clitic originated in Old English as an inflexional suffix marking genitive case In the modern language it can often be attached to the end of an entire phrase as in The king of Spain s wife or The man whom you met yesterday s bicycle As a result it is normally viewed by linguists as a clitic that is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a word but depends phonologically on another word or phrase 20 An identical form of the clitic exists in the North Germanic languages and in the North Frisian sister language of Old English But the accepted linguistic history of the clitic possessive in these languages is very different In Old English es was the ending of the genitive singular of most strong declension nouns and the masculine and neuter genitive singular of strong adjectives The ending e was used for strong nouns with Germanic ō stems which constituted most of the feminine strong nouns and for the feminine genitive singular form of strong adjectives 21 Gender Singular PluralStrong masculine es afeminine e aneuter es aWeak m f n an enaIn Middle English the es ending was generalised to the genitive of all strong declension nouns By the sixteenth century the remaining strong declension endings were generalized to all nouns The spelling es remained but in many words the letter e no longer represented a sound In those words printers often copied the French practice of substituting an apostrophe for the letter e In later use s was used for all nouns where the s sound was used for the possessive form and when adding s to a word like love the e was no longer omitted The s form was also used for plural noun forms These were derived from the strong declension as ending in Old English In Middle English the spelling was changed to es reflecting a change in pronunciation and extended to all cases of the plural including the genitive Later conventions removed the apostrophe from subjective and objective case forms and added it after the s in possessive case forms See Apostrophe Historical development nbsp A bookplate of 1693 using his In the Early Modern English of 1580 to 1620 it was sometimes spelled as his as a folk etymology e g St James his park see his genitive The verse Genesis 9 6 shows the development The Wycliffe Bible 1395 contains the word mannus Who euere schedith out mannus blood his blood schal be sched for man is maad to the ymage of God 22 In the original King James Bible 1611 there is mans Who so sheddeth mans blood by man shall his blood be shed for in the image of God made he man 23 In the plural the 1611 King James has mens but the older Wycliffe Bible uses of men Another remnant of the Old English genitive is the adverbial genitive where the ending s without apostrophe forms adverbs of time nowadays closed Sundays There is a literary periphrastic form using of as in of a summer day 24 There are also forms in ce from genitives of number and place once twice thrice whence hence thence There is also the genitive of measure forms such as a five mile journey and a ten foot pole use what is actually a remnant of the Old English genitive plural which ending in a had neither the final s nor underwent the foot feet vowel mutation of the nominative plural In essence the underlying forms are a five of miles O E gen pl mila journey and a ten of feet O E gen pl fōta pole 25 Status of the possessive as a grammatical case editHistorically the possessive morpheme represented by s was a case marker as noted in the previous section and the modern English possessive can also be analysed as a grammatical case called the possessive case or genitive case However it differs from the noun inflection of languages such as German in that in phrases like the king of England s horse the ending is separated from the head noun king and attaches to the last word of the phrase To account for this the possessive can be analysed for instance as a clitic construction an enclitic postposition or as an inflection of the last word of a phrase edge inflection The form the king s horse of England was the correct form in old times when but not now For instance The Oxford English Grammar under the heading Case states In speech the genitive is signalled in singular nouns by an inflection that has the same pronunciation variants as for plural nouns in the common case 26 A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language under the heading The forms of the genitive inflection similarly refers to the genitive inflection with regular and irregular plurals 27 but later especially with regard to the group genitive revises this to clarify that the s ending is not a case ending as in German or Latin but is more appropriately described as an enclitic postposition 28 The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language discusses the possessive in greater detail taking account of group or phrasal genitives like the King of England s and somebody else s and analyses the construction as an inflection of the final word of the phrase as opposed to the head word The discussion in support of this inflectional analysis includes the personal pronouns where no other analysis is possible the fact that the genitive s cannot stand alone unlike m in I m which can be expanded to am the varying form of the genitive suffix ɪz z s depending on the phonological properties of the base to which it attaches the sensitivity of the genitive formation to the internal morphological structure of the noun 29 Other views are 1 that the possessive can be regarded as having elements of an affix and elements of a clitic which are seen as idealized categories and 2 that the possessive form can be an affix or a clitic but only one of the two in any given example 30 31 Notes edit This article uses asterisks to indicate ungrammatical examples References edit McArthur Roshan McArthur Thomas Burns 2005 Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language Oxford University Press Saxon Genitive ISBN 9780192806376 a b Yin Karen 2011 Apostrophe S vs Apostrophe Forming Possessives of Words Ending in S AP vs Chicago Archived from the original on 2020 11 12 Retrieved 2020 12 28 The Chicago Manual of Style 17th Edition The Chicago Manual of Style Online The Elements of Style The Canadian Press Stylebook 14th Edition ISBN 978 0 920009 42 0 its Origin and meaning of its by Online Etymology Dictionary www etymonline com Fowler H W 2015 Butterfield Jeremy ed Fowler s Dictionary of Modern English Usage Oxford University Press p 887 ISBN 978 0 19 966135 0 Fowler Henry W Burchfield R W 2000 double possessive The New Fowler s Modern English Usage revised third ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 227 ISBN 01 9860 263 4 Huddleston Rodney Pullum Geoffrey K 2002 5 Nouns and noun phrases 16 3 Type III The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 468 9 ISBN 05 2143 146 8 Quirk Randolph Greenbaum Sidney Leech Geoffrey Svartik Jan 1985 A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language Longman p 330 double possessive tag wiki english stackexchange com Henry Sweet 1898 2014 A New English Grammar Logical and Historical Vol II Clarendon Press p 75 a b Garner Bryan A 2016 Garner s Modern English Usage 4th ed p 713 ISBN 978 0 19 049148 2 Quinion Michael Double Possessive World Wide Words Retrieved 2009 05 19 The American Heritage Book of English Usage 1996 Page 26 7 June 2008 Archived from the original on 7 June 2008 page 162 under the heading double genitive in Pam Peters 2004 The Cambridge Guide to English Usage Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 62181 X of XIII 44 The Oxford English Dictionary Vol 10 2 ed Oxford Clarendon Press 1989 p 715 ISBN 01 9861 186 2 Barker Chris 2019 6 Possessives and relational nouns In Paul Portner Klaus Heusinger Claudia Maienborn eds Semantics Noun Phrases and Verb Phrases De Gruyter Mouton pp 177 203 doi 10 1515 9783110589443 006 ISBN 9783110589443 S2CID 11447167 Quirk Randolph Greenbaum Sidney Leech Geoffrey Svartvik Jan 1985 5 116 note b A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language London and New York Longman p 322 ISBN 0 582 51734 6 English Possessive s Clitic and Affix linguisticsociety org Campbell A Old English Grammar Oxford University Press Oxford 1959 Chapter IX The Wycliffe Bible Genesis 9 Genesis Chapter 9 1611 King James Bible adverbial genitive Merriam Webster s Dictionary of English Usage Springfield MA Merriam Webster 1994 pp 35 6 ISBN 978 0 87779 132 4 Retrieved 2009 05 16 Also see entry of 3 page 680 The Origins and Development of the English Language Volume 1 John Algeo Thomas Pyles Cengage Learning 2009 p 96 Greenbaum Sidney 1996 The Oxford English Grammar Oxford University Press pp 109 110 ISBN 0 19 861250 8 In speech the genitive is signalled in singular nouns by an inflection that has the same pronunciation variants as for plural nouns in the common case Quirk Randolph Greenbaum Sidney Leech Geoffrey Svartik Jan 1985 A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language Longman p 319 In writing the inflection of regular nouns is realized in the singular by apostrophe s boy s and in the regular plural by the apostrophe following the plural s boys Quirk Randolph Greenbaum Sidney Leech Geoffrey Svartvik Jan 1985 A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language Harlow Longman p 328 ISBN 978 0 582 51734 9 Payne John Huddleston Rodney 2002 Nouns and noun phrases In Huddleston Rodney Pullum Geoffrey eds The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press pp 479 481 ISBN 0 521 43146 8 We conclude that both head and phrasal genitives involve case inflection With head genitives it is always a noun that inflects while the phrasal genitive can apply to words of most classes Hudson Richard 2013 A cognitive analysis of John s hat In Borjars Kersti Denison David Scott Alan eds Morphosyntactic Categories and the Expression of Possession John Benjamins Publishing Company pp 123 148 ISBN 9789027273000 Borjars Kersti Denison David Krajewski Grzegorz Scott Alan 2013 Expression of Possession in English In Borjars Kersti Denison David Scott Alan eds Morphosyntactic Categories and the Expression of Possession John Benjamins Publishing Company pp 149 176 ISBN 9789027273000 External links editUsing the possessive in English A guide for learners of English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title English possessive amp oldid 1193130219, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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