We all know that in English you form the possessive by adding an apostrophe and an s, or sometimes just an apostrophe, at the end of a noun. Pronouns have their own possessive forms (my, your, his, her, its, our, their); for a discussion of the rules used to make the possessives of individual nouns, see
Forming Possessives under Word Formation. Of course, another way to indicate possession is to use a prepositional phrase using of: the property of the town.
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It is important to remember that possessive constructions are often used with inanimate nouns (a stones throw, the waters edge). And although we call them possessives, they often do not indicate simple possession but a number of other relations. These include source or origin (the ambassadors letter, Hardys novels), description or classification (the cars speed, the stadiums design, a months salary), and even purpose (a womens college, boys clothing).
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Listed below are some of the more troublesome constructions.
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both.A plague on both your houses! We know this familiar curse from Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet. It means a plague on the houses of both of you. While this both your construction is still idiomatic, you can be more precise grammatically by saying of both. Thus you would say I gave copies of the book to the mothers of both (rather than both their mothers) or Its the fault of both (rather than both their fault or boths fault).
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each other / one another. The possessive forms of each other and one another are written each others and one anothers, that is, with an apostrophe before the -s: The boys wore each others (not each others) coats. They had forgotten one anothers (not one anothers) names.
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else. When a pronoun is followed by else, the possessive form is generally written with the s following else: That must be someone elses (not someones else) book. Both who elses and whose else are in use, but not whose elses: Who elses book could it have been? Whose else could it have been?
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group possessive. You form the possessive for noun phrases by adding an s or an apostrophe at the end of the phrase: Jim and Nancys house, the Department of Chemistrys new requirements, a three months journey. This construction gets cumbersome when the noun phrase is long, in which case you should probably use a prepositional phrase instead. Thus instead of saying the house that overlooks the bays property line, you should say the property line of the house that overlooks the bay.
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of mine, of yours (double genitive). People sometimes object to the double genitive construction, as in a friend of my fathers or a book of mine. But the construction has been used in English since the 14th century and serves a useful purpose. It can help sort out ambiguous phrases like Bobs photograph, which could mean either a photograph of Bob (i.e., revealing Bobs image) or a photograph that is in Bobs possession. A photograph of Bobs, on the other hand, can only be a photo that Bob has in his possession and may or may not show Bobs image. 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 Thats the only friend of yours that Ive ever met, since sentences such as Thats your only friend that Ive ever met and Thats your only friend, whom Ive ever met are not grammatical.
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whose. You can use whose as a possessive to refer to both animate and inanimate nouns. Thus you can say Crick, whose theories still influence work in laboratories around the world or Cricks theories, whose influence continues to be felt in laboratories around the world. With inanimate nouns you can also use of which as an alternative, as in Cricks theories, the influence of which continues to be felt in laboratories around the world. But as this example demonstrates, substituting of which for whose is sometimes cumbersome.