Navigation bar
  Print document Start Previous page
 145 of 346 
Next page End  

145
§ 181. A specific feature of the English genitive case is the so-called group genitive when ‘s can be joined:
1) to a group of two coordinated nouns if such a group refers to a single idea (when two persons possess or 
    are related to something they have in common):
Mum and Dad’s room. 
John and Mary’s car.
2) to a more extensive phrase which may even contain a clause:
the Duke of Norfolk’s sister,
the secretary of state’s private room,
the man I saw yesterday’s son.
3) to a noun (pronoun) + a pronoun group:
someone else’s benefit.
4) to a group ending in a numeral:
in an hour or two’s time.
§ 182. The main meaning of the genitive case is that of possession, hence the traditional term ‘the possessive
case’. This general sense undergoes a number of modifications under the influence of the lexical meaning of
both the noun in the genitive case and the noun it modifies.
The main modifications of this meaning are:
1. The idea of belonging: John’s coat, Mary’s car.
2. Different kinds of relations, such as:
a) relation of the whole to its parts: John’s leg, the cat’s tail;
b) personal or social relations: John’s wife, John’s friend.
Besides the genitive case retains some of its old meanings:
subjective relations:
Chekhov’s observation = Chekhov observed;
the doctor’s arrival    =- the doctor arrived;
authorship:
Byron’s poem, Shakespeare’s tragedy;
objective relations:
Caesar’s murder = Caesar was murdered;
Jule’s arrest     = Jule was arrested;
measure:
an hour’s trip, a mile’s distance.
In some cases the form ’s completely loses the meaning of possession and comes to denote a quality, as in
man’s blood, woman’s work (serving in works canteen or a transport cafe, is generally regarded as woman’s
Сайт создан в системе uCoz