Possessive case



         


Grammatical cases
List of grammatical cases
Abessive case
Ablative case
Absolutive case
Accusative case
Adessive case
Allative case
Comitative case
Dative case
Dedative case
Elative case
Ergative case
Essive case
Genitive case
Illative case
Inessive case
Instrumental case
Locative case
Nominative case
Oblique case
Partitive case
Possessive case
Postpositional case
Prepositional case
Prolative case
Terminative case
Translative case
Vocative case
Declension
Declension in English


Possessive case is a case that exists in some languages used for possession. It is not the same as the genitive case, though the two have proximal meanings in many languages.

[Top]

Alienable and Inalienable

English does not have a grammatical facility to make such distinctions.

There are many types of possession, but a common distinction is alienable versus inalienable possession. Alienability refers to the ability to dissociate something from its parent — in this case, a quality from its owner.

When something is inalienably possessed, it is usually an attribute: for example, John's big nose is inalienably possessed, because it cannot (without surgery) be removed from John — it's simply a quality he has. In contrast, 'my briefcase' is alienably possessed — it can be separated from me.

Many languages make this distinction in some way. Saying something like 'I have my dad's big nose' with the latter noun-phrase marked inalienable would imply some sort of genetic inheritance; marked alienable, it would imply that you had cut off your father's nose or somesuch and were actually in physical possession of it.

[Top]

Etymology

The term 'possessive case' is often used to refer to the "'s" morpheme, which is suffixed onto many nouns in English to denote 'possession by'. This categorization is arguably not strictly correct — some grammarians contend that this affix is actually a clitic. By descent, however, the English usage does stem from a case ending, Old English -es. See genitive case for details.






  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License