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Inanimate whose

The inanimate whose refers to the use in English of the relative pronoun whose with non-personal antecedents, as in: "That's the car whose alarm keeps waking us up at night." The construction is also known as the whose inanimate, non-personal whose, and neuter whose.

The inanimate whose appears in such works as the King James Version of the Bible:
"And they said; Goe to, let us build us a city and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven, and let us make us a name, lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth." (Genesis 11:4)

The use of the inanimate whose dates from the 15th century, but since the 18th century has drawn criticism from those who consider whose to be the genitive (possessive) only of the relative pronoun who and therefore believe it should be restricted to personal antecedents. Critics of inanimate whose prefer constructions such as those using of which the, which others find clumsy or overly formal.

Usage

Users of the inanimate whose employ it as a relative pronoun with non-personal antecedents, as in:

"That's the car whose alarm keeps waking us up at night."

Those who avoid using whose with non-personal antecedents assert that it is the genitive (possessive) of only the relative pronoun who. They employ alternatives such as of which the, as in:[1]

"That's the car of which the alarm keeps waking us up at night."
or
"That's the car the alarm of which keeps waking us up at night."

Those who object to this use of of which the find it clunky or overly formal.[2]

The inanimate whose is restricted to the relative pronoun; English speakers do not use whose as a non-personal interrogative possessive: the whose in "Whose car is this?" can refer only to a person.[3]

Etymology and history

The Old English genitive of the neuter pronoun hwæt ('what') was hwæs, which later evolved as whose into the genitive of which.[4] The first recorded instance of inanimate relative whose occurs in 1479, about 50 years after the first example of relative who.[5] There is not a great deal of data for the preceding centuries, so it is difficult to pin down its evolution. Attested usage is common in Early Modern English, with inanimate whose appearing repeatedly in the works of Shakespeare, in the King James Bible, and in the writings of Milton and others.[6]

Old English had grammatical gender, and pronouns agreed with the grammatical gender of the nouns they referred to, regardless of the noun's innate gender.[7] For example, the Old English wīf ('wife') was neuter and referred to with the pronoun hit ('it'), and wīfmann ('woman') was masculine and referred to with the pronoun ('he').[8] English lost grammatical gender during the late Middle Ages, and the pronouns he and she came to refer to animate subjects of male (or indeterminate) and female biological gender, and it came to refer to inanimate subjects. The American philologist George Perkins Marsh posited that this animate–inanimate distinction led to an eventual discomfort with using whose to refer to both.[7] In contrast, Richard Hogg speculates that causality is the other way around.[9]

In some dialects, thats has developed as a colloquial genitive relative pronoun for non-personal antecedents, as in:[10]

"That's the car thats alarm keeps waking us up at night."

Grammars and style guides

 
Robert Lowth's is the oldest known objection to use of the inanimate whose.

The earliest known objections to the inanimate whose date from the late 18th century. In 1764, the English grammarian Robert Lowth disapproved of the inanimate whose except in "the higher Poetry, which loves to consider everything as bearing a personal character".[11] The English James Buchanan in his Regular English Syntax of 1767 considered inanimate whose an incorrect construction that occurs "in the lower kind of poetry and prose", but accepted it in "solemn poetry" when used for personification.[12] In his Plain and Complete Grammar of 1772, Anselm Bayly accepted use of the inanimate whose.[13] The English grammarian Joseph Priestley wrote that whose "may be said to be the genitive of which",[14] but objected to such use in the 3rd edition of The Rudiments of English Grammar in 1772: "The word whose begins likewise to be restricted to persons, but it is not done so generally but that good writers, and even in prose, use it when speaking of things. I do not think, however, that the construction is generally pleasing."[15]

In the 6th edition of his A Dictionary of the English Language (1785), Samuel Johnson considered whose "rather the poetic than the regular genitive of which".[16] The American grammarian Lindley Murray wrote of the inanimate whose in his English Grammar of 1795, but his position on it is uncertain; he reprinted Priestly's opinion but also stated: "By the use of this license, one word is substituted for three". Other grammarians soon thereafter pronounced their disapproval, including Noah Webster in 1798.[17]

More grammarians continued such disapproval into the 19th century.[17] T. O. Churchill declared in A New Grammar of the English Language of 1823 that "this practice is now discountenanced by all correct writers".[18] The American philologist George Perkins Marsh stated in his Lectures on the English Language of 1860: "At present, the use of whose, the possessive of who, is pretty generally confined to persons, or things personified, and we should scruple to say, 'I passed a house whose windows were open.' This is a modern, and indeed by no means yet fully established distinction."[19] Henry Bradley in the Oxford English Dictionary asserted "usually replaced by of which, except where the latter would produce an intolerably clumsy form".[20]

Other grammarians began noticing discrepancies between usage and the assertions of those who prescribed against the inanimate whose.[17] The American Goold Brown, in his The Grammar of English Grammars of 1851, stated that whose "is sometimes used to supply the place of the possessive case, otherwise wanting, to the relative which";[21] he cited a number of cases of its use and of those who prescribe against it and their rationales, and concluded: "Grammarians would perhaps differ less, if they read more."[22] In The Standard of Usage in English of 1908, the American literary historian Thomas Lounsbury asserted that the inanimate whose "had been employed as a relative to antecedents denoting things without life by every author in our literature who is entitled to be called an authority".[23] John Lesslie Hall published his research on the subject in his English Usage of 1917; he discovered over 1000 passages by about 140 authors from the 15th to the 20th centuries that used the inanimate whose,[24] including use by those who had objected to it or declared its use rare.[25] Hall considered "authors that avoid whose ... a small minority"[26] and stated that using of which the in its place was rare in spoken American English.[27]

In his A Dictionary of Modern English Usage of 1926, H. W. Fowler derided those who prescribed against the inanimate whose,[4] writing: "in the starch that stiffens English style one of the most effective ingredients is the rule that whose shall refer only to persons"; he asserted that the alternative adds flexibility to style[28] and proclaimed: "Let us, in the name of common sense, prohibit the prohibition of inanimate whose".[28] The revised versions of that style guide by Robert Burchfield (1996) and Jeremy Butterfield (2015) called the avoidance of the inanimate whose a "folk-belief".[4][29] In his Plain Words of 1954, Ernest Gowers calls the "grammarians' rule" that whose "must not be used of inanimate objects ... a cramping one, productive of ugly sentences and a temptation to misplaced commas". He states that "sensible writers have always ignored the rule, and sensible grammarians have now abandoned it".[30]

A survey conducted by Sterling A. Leonard in 1932 found that respondents considered the use of inanimate whose established; Raymond D. Crisp replicated the survey in 1971 and found that respondents considered the usage disputable.[17] Mary Vaiana Taylor reported in 1974 that two-thirds of post-secondary teaching assistants would still mark the construction wrong on a student's paper.[31]

Merriam–Webster's Dictionary of English Usage states that, amongst "the current books" that discussed the subject as of the late 20th century, "not one of them finds [inanimate] whose anything but standard". To the assertions of early grammarians, that dictionary counters that "[i]ts common occurrence in poetry undoubtedly owes more to its graceful quality than to any supposed love of personification among poets" and that its usage "is perhaps more likely to occur in the works of good writers than bad ones".[17] It asserts that "notion that whose may not properly be used of anything except persons is a superstition" and such use is "entirely standard as an alternative to of which in all varieties of discourse".[32] In Modern American Usage, Bryan A. Garner calls the inanimate whose "often an inescapable way of avoiding clumsiness".[33] The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language emphasizes that such "genitives ... are completely grammatical and by no means exceptional",[34] with a note that "a number of usage manuals feel it necessary to point out that relative whose can have a non-personal antecedent: there are apparently some speakers who are inclined to think that it is restricted to personal antecedents".[34] The 16th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style (2010) states that the construction is "widely accepted as preventing unnecessary awkwardness" and "lends greater smoothness" to prose than of which.[35]

References

  1. ^ Johansson 1993, p. 97; Quirk et al. 1985, pp. 1249–1250; Huddleston & Pullum 2002, pp. 1049–1050.
  2. ^ Johansson 1993, p. 97; Quirk et al. 1985, pp. 1249–1250.
  3. ^ Jespersen 1993, p. 152.
  4. ^ a b c Burchfield 1998, p. 849.
  5. ^ Bergs & Stein 2001, p. 88.
  6. ^ Burchfield 1998, p. 849; Fowler 2009, p. 728.
  7. ^ a b Marsh 1860, pp. 398–398.
  8. ^ Algeo & Butcher 2013, p. 99.
  9. ^ Hogg, Richard (1992). The Cambridge history of the English language, Volume I. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 144.
  10. ^ Pearce 2012, p. 156.
  11. ^ Gilman 1989, p. 960; Lowth 1764, p. 36.
  12. ^ Leonard 1962, p. 66; Buchanan 1767, pp. 74–75.
  13. ^ Leonard 1962, p. 66; Bayly 1772, p. 84.
  14. ^ Leonard 1962, p. 66.
  15. ^ Gilman 1989, p. 960; Leonard 1962, p. 66; Priestley 1772, p. 99.
  16. ^ Leonard 1962, p. 65.
  17. ^ a b c d e Gilman 1989, p. 960.
  18. ^ Gilman 1989, p. 960; Churchill 1823, pp. 225–227.
  19. ^ Hall 1917, p. 320; Marsh 1860, p. 396.
  20. ^ Burchfield 1998, p. 849; Gilman 1989, p. 960; Craigie, Bradley & Onions 1928, p. 100.
  21. ^ Brown 1851, p. 285.
  22. ^ Gilman 1989, p. 960; Brown 1851, p. 285.
  23. ^ Hall 1917, p. 325; Lounsbury 1908, pp. 106–109.
  24. ^ Gilman 1989, p. 960; Hall 1917, pp. 323–325.
  25. ^ Hall 1917, pp. 320–323.
  26. ^ Hall 1917, p. 326.
  27. ^ Hall 1917, p. 321.
  28. ^ a b Fowler 2009, p. 727.
  29. ^ Fowler 2015, pp. 887–888.
  30. ^ Gowers & Fraser 1973, p. 146; Gowers & Gowers 2014, pp. 220–221.
  31. ^ Gilman 1989, p. 960; Taylor 1974, p. 766.
  32. ^ Merriam-Webster 2002, pp. 782–783.
  33. ^ Garner 2009, p. 837.
  34. ^ a b Huddleston & Pullum 2002, pp. 1049–1050.
  35. ^ University of Chicago Press editorial staff 2010, p. 220.

Works cited

inanimate, whose, inanimate, whose, refers, english, relative, pronoun, whose, with, personal, antecedents, that, whose, alarm, keeps, waking, night, construction, also, known, whose, inanimate, personal, whose, neuter, whose, inanimate, whose, appears, such, . The inanimate whose refers to the use in English of the relative pronoun whose with non personal antecedents as in That s the car whose alarm keeps waking us up at night The construction is also known as the whose inanimate non personal whose and neuter whose The inanimate whose appears in such works as the King James Version of the Bible And they said Goe to let us build us a city and a tower whose top may reach unto heaven and let us make us a name lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole earth Genesis 11 4 The use of the inanimate whose dates from the 15th century but since the 18th century has drawn criticism from those who consider whose to be the genitive possessive only of the relative pronoun who and therefore believe it should be restricted to personal antecedents Critics of inanimate whose prefer constructions such as those using of which the which others find clumsy or overly formal Contents 1 Usage 2 Etymology and history 3 Grammars and style guides 4 References 4 1 Works citedUsage EditUsers of the inanimate whose employ it as a relative pronoun with non personal antecedents as in That s the car whose alarm keeps waking us up at night dd Those who avoid using whose with non personal antecedents assert that it is the genitive possessive of only the relative pronoun who They employ alternatives such as of which the as in 1 That s the car of which the alarm keeps waking us up at night dd or That s the car the alarm of which keeps waking us up at night dd Those who object to this use of of which the find it clunky or overly formal 2 The inanimate whose is restricted to the relative pronoun English speakers do not use whose as a non personal interrogative possessive the whose in Whose car is this can refer only to a person 3 Etymology and history Edit Look up whose in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Old English genitive of the neuter pronoun hwaet what was hwaes which later evolved as whose into the genitive of which 4 The first recorded instance of inanimate relative whose occurs in 1479 about 50 years after the first example of relative who 5 There is not a great deal of data for the preceding centuries so it is difficult to pin down its evolution Attested usage is common in Early Modern English with inanimate whose appearing repeatedly in the works of Shakespeare in the King James Bible and in the writings of Milton and others 6 Old English had grammatical gender and pronouns agreed with the grammatical gender of the nouns they referred to regardless of the noun s innate gender 7 For example the Old English wif wife was neuter and referred to with the pronoun hit it and wifmann woman was masculine and referred to with the pronoun he he 8 English lost grammatical gender during the late Middle Ages and the pronouns he and she came to refer to animate subjects of male or indeterminate and female biological gender and it came to refer to inanimate subjects The American philologist George Perkins Marsh posited that this animate inanimate distinction led to an eventual discomfort with using whose to refer to both 7 In contrast Richard Hogg speculates that causality is the other way around 9 In some dialects thats has developed as a colloquial genitive relative pronoun for non personal antecedents as in 10 That s the car thats alarm keeps waking us up at night dd Grammars and style guides Edit Robert Lowth s is the oldest known objection to use of the inanimate whose The earliest known objections to the inanimate whose date from the late 18th century In 1764 the English grammarian Robert Lowth disapproved of the inanimate whose except in the higher Poetry which loves to consider everything as bearing a personal character 11 The English James Buchanan in his Regular English Syntax of 1767 considered inanimate whose an incorrect construction that occurs in the lower kind of poetry and prose but accepted it in solemn poetry when used for personification 12 In his Plain and Complete Grammar of 1772 Anselm Bayly accepted use of the inanimate whose 13 The English grammarian Joseph Priestley wrote that whose may be said to be the genitive of which 14 but objected to such use in the 3rd edition of The Rudiments of English Grammar in 1772 The word whose begins likewise to be restricted to persons but it is not done so generally but that good writers and even in prose use it when speaking of things I do not think however that the construction is generally pleasing 15 In the 6th edition of his A Dictionary of the English Language 1785 Samuel Johnson considered whose rather the poetic than the regular genitive of which 16 The American grammarian Lindley Murray wrote of the inanimate whose in his English Grammar of 1795 but his position on it is uncertain he reprinted Priestly s opinion but also stated By the use of this license one word is substituted for three Other grammarians soon thereafter pronounced their disapproval including Noah Webster in 1798 17 More grammarians continued such disapproval into the 19th century 17 T O Churchill declared in A New Grammar of the English Language of 1823 that this practice is now discountenanced by all correct writers 18 The American philologist George Perkins Marsh stated in his Lectures on the English Language of 1860 At present the use of whose the possessive of who is pretty generally confined to persons or things personified and we should scruple to say I passed a house whose windows were open This is a modern and indeed by no means yet fully established distinction 19 Henry Bradley in the Oxford English Dictionary asserted usually replaced by of which except where the latter would produce an intolerably clumsy form 20 Other grammarians began noticing discrepancies between usage and the assertions of those who prescribed against the inanimate whose 17 The American Goold Brown in his The Grammar of English Grammars of 1851 stated that whose is sometimes used to supply the place of the possessive case otherwise wanting to the relative which 21 he cited a number of cases of its use and of those who prescribe against it and their rationales and concluded Grammarians would perhaps differ less if they read more 22 In The Standard of Usage in English of 1908 the American literary historian Thomas Lounsbury asserted that the inanimate whose had been employed as a relative to antecedents denoting things without life by every author in our literature who is entitled to be called an authority 23 John Lesslie Hall published his research on the subject in his English Usage of 1917 he discovered over 1000 passages by about 140 authors from the 15th to the 20th centuries that used the inanimate whose 24 including use by those who had objected to it or declared its use rare 25 Hall considered authors that avoid whose a small minority 26 and stated that using of which the in its place was rare in spoken American English 27 In his A Dictionary of Modern English Usage of 1926 H W Fowler derided those who prescribed against the inanimate whose 4 writing in the starch that stiffens English style one of the most effective ingredients is the rule that whose shall refer only to persons he asserted that the alternative adds flexibility to style 28 and proclaimed Let us in the name of common sense prohibit the prohibition of inanimate whose 28 The revised versions of that style guide by Robert Burchfield 1996 and Jeremy Butterfield 2015 called the avoidance of the inanimate whose a folk belief 4 29 In his Plain Words of 1954 Ernest Gowers calls the grammarians rule that whose must not be used of inanimate objects a cramping one productive of ugly sentences and a temptation to misplaced commas He states that sensible writers have always ignored the rule and sensible grammarians have now abandoned it 30 A survey conducted by Sterling A Leonard in 1932 found that respondents considered the use of inanimate whose established Raymond D Crisp replicated the survey in 1971 and found that respondents considered the usage disputable 17 Mary Vaiana Taylor reported in 1974 that two thirds of post secondary teaching assistants would still mark the construction wrong on a student s paper 31 Merriam Webster s Dictionary of English Usage states that amongst the current books that discussed the subject as of the late 20th century not one of them finds inanimate whose anything but standard To the assertions of early grammarians that dictionary counters that i ts common occurrence in poetry undoubtedly owes more to its graceful quality than to any supposed love of personification among poets and that its usage is perhaps more likely to occur in the works of good writers than bad ones 17 It asserts that notion that whose may not properly be used of anything except persons is a superstition and such use is entirely standard as an alternative to of which in all varieties of discourse 32 In Modern American Usage Bryan A Garner calls the inanimate whose often an inescapable way of avoiding clumsiness 33 The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language emphasizes that such genitives are completely grammatical and by no means exceptional 34 with a note that a number of usage manuals feel it necessary to point out that relative whose can have a non personal antecedent there are apparently some speakers who are inclined to think that it is restricted to personal antecedents 34 The 16th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style 2010 states that the construction is widely accepted as preventing unnecessary awkwardness and lends greater smoothness to prose than of which 35 References Edit Johansson 1993 p 97 Quirk et al 1985 pp 1249 1250 Huddleston amp Pullum 2002 pp 1049 1050 Johansson 1993 p 97 Quirk et al 1985 pp 1249 1250 Jespersen 1993 p 152 a b c Burchfield 1998 p 849 Bergs amp Stein 2001 p 88 Burchfield 1998 p 849 Fowler 2009 p 728 a b Marsh 1860 pp 398 398 Algeo amp Butcher 2013 p 99 Hogg Richard 1992 The Cambridge history of the English language Volume I Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 144 Pearce 2012 p 156 Gilman 1989 p 960 Lowth 1764 p 36 Leonard 1962 p 66 Buchanan 1767 pp 74 75 Leonard 1962 p 66 Bayly 1772 p 84 Leonard 1962 p 66 Gilman 1989 p 960 Leonard 1962 p 66 Priestley 1772 p 99 Leonard 1962 p 65 a b c d e Gilman 1989 p 960 Gilman 1989 p 960 Churchill 1823 pp 225 227 Hall 1917 p 320 Marsh 1860 p 396 Burchfield 1998 p 849 Gilman 1989 p 960 Craigie Bradley amp Onions 1928 p 100 Brown 1851 p 285 Gilman 1989 p 960 Brown 1851 p 285 Hall 1917 p 325 Lounsbury 1908 pp 106 109 Gilman 1989 p 960 Hall 1917 pp 323 325 Hall 1917 pp 320 323 Hall 1917 p 326 Hall 1917 p 321 a b Fowler 2009 p 727 Fowler 2015 pp 887 888 Gowers amp Fraser 1973 p 146 Gowers amp Gowers 2014 pp 220 221 Gilman 1989 p 960 Taylor 1974 p 766 Merriam Webster 2002 pp 782 783 Garner 2009 p 837 a b Huddleston amp Pullum 2002 pp 1049 1050 University of Chicago Press editorial staff 2010 p 220 Works cited Edit Algeo John Butcher Carmen A 2013 The Origins and Development of the English Language Cengage Learning ISBN 978 1 133 30727 3 Bayly Anselm 1772 A Plain and Complete Grammar with the English Accidence Bergs Alexander T Stein Dieter 2001 The Role of Markedness in the Actuation and Actualization of Linguistic Change In Andersen Henning ed Actualization Linguistic Change in Progress John Benjamins Publishing Company pp 79 94 ISBN 90 272 3726 3 Brown Goold 1851 The Grammar of English Grammars Samuel S amp William Wood Buchanan James 1767 A regular English syntax Wherein is exhibited the whole variety of English construction properly exemplified To which is added the elegant manner of arranging words and members of sentences The whole reduced to practice for the use of private young gentlemen and ladies as well as of our most eminent schools Burchfield R W 1998 The New Fowler s Modern English Usage Revised 3 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 860263 7 Churchill T O 1823 A New Grammar of the English Language etc W Simpkin amp E Marshall Craigie W A Bradley Henry Onions C T 1928 A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles Founded Mainly on the Materials Collected by the Philological Society Vol 10 part 2 Clarendon Press at Oxford Retrieved 2017 02 13 Fowler H W 2009 Crystal David ed A Dictionary of Modern English Usage The Classic First Edition Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 161511 5 Fowler H W 2015 Butterfield Jeremy ed Fowler s Dictionary of Modern English Usage Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966135 0 Garner Bryan 2009 Garner s Modern American Usage Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 987462 0 Gilman E Ward ed 1989 Webster s Dictionary of English Usage Merriam Webster ISBN 978 0 87779 032 7 Gowers Ernest Fraser Bruce 1973 The Complete Plain Words H M Stationery Office ISBN 978 0 11 700340 8 Gowers Ernest Gowers Rebecca 2014 Plain Words Particular ISBN 978 0 241 96035 6 Hall John Lesslie 1917 English Usage Studies in the History and Uses of English Words and Phrases Scott Foresman and Company Retrieved 2017 02 13 Huddleston Rodney Pullum Geoffrey 2002 The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43146 8 Jespersen Otto 1993 1933 Essentials of English Grammar Routledge ISBN 9780415104401 Johansson Christine 1993 Whose and Of Which with non personal antecedents in written and spoken English In Souter Clive Atwell Eric eds Corpus based Computational Linguistics Rodopi pp 97 117 ISBN 90 5183 485 3 Leonard Sterling Andrus 1962 1929 The Doctrine of Correctness in English Usage 1700 1800 Russell amp Russell Lounsbury Thomas Raynesford 1908 The Standard of Usage in English Harper amp Brothers Retrieved 2017 02 13 Lowth Robert 1764 A Short Introduction to English Grammar A New Edition Corrected A Millar R amp J Dodsley Marsh George Perkins 1860 Lectures on the English Language C Scribner Merriam Webster s Concise Dictionary of English Usage Penguin 2002 ISBN 9780877796336 Pearce Michael 2012 The Routledge Dictionary of English Language Studies Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 26428 5 Priestley Joseph 1772 The Rudiments of English Grammar 3 ed Quirk Randolph Greenbaum Sidney Leech Geoffrey Svartvik Jan 1985 A Comprehensive Grammar of the English Language Longman ISBN 978 0 582 51734 9 Taylor Mary Vaiana April 1974 The Folklore of Usage College English National Council of Teachers of English 35 7 756 768 doi 10 2307 375398 JSTOR 375398 University of Chicago Press editorial staff 2010 The Chicago Manual of Style University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 10420 1 Portals Language Linguistics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inanimate whose amp oldid 1128904176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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