110 Chapter 5 Nouns and noun phrases
available. Her letter might be the letter she wrote or the letter she received, and
there are other possibilities available in special contexts. In the context of a language
teaching class, for example, it could be the letter that has been assigned to her to
translate.
9.2 Other uses of the genitive
Genitive case is also used in the following constructions:
[63] SUBJECT
ii FUSED HEAD
iii OBLIQUE
She didn 't approve of [his being given a second chance].
They accepted Kim 's proposal but not Pa t's.
iv PREDICATIVE
V ATTRIBUTIVE
The argument was sparked by a casual remark of Kim 'so
Everything in this room is Mary's.
They've just moved to an old people's home.
.. In formal style the subject of a gerund-participial clause that is functioning as
complement (of a verb or preposition) appears in genitive case, as in [i].
- Like most other determiners, a genitive can fuse with the head, as in [ii], under
stood as "Pat's proposal". - The oblique genitive occurs as complement to of in a post-head dependent. Note
the contrast between a casual remark of Kim 's in [iii], which is marked as indef
inite by the article a, and Kim 's casual remark, which is marked as definite by the
genitive subject-determiner. - The predicative genitive functions as complement of be, become, etc., and here
it does indicate possession, as in [iv]. - The attributive genitive functions as internal modifier in NP structure. Note that
in [v] an is determiner to the larger nominal (old people's home), not the genitive
one (old people's); this contrasts with [60iia] above.
Exercises
- Write out or type the following passage
(it's the opening paragraph of the preface
to Steven Pinker's book The Language
Instinct) with the nouns underlined and the
NPs enclosed in square brackets. (Don't
forget that one NP can occur within another:
in a phrase like I met the fa ther of the bride,
for example, the bride is an NP within the
larger NP the father of the bride, so you
would write [the/other of [the bridell.)
J have never met a person who is not inter
ested in language. J wrote this book to try to
satisfy that curiosity. Language is beginning
to submit to that uniquely satisfying kind of
understanding that we call science, but the
news has been kept a secret.
2. There are a number of nouns that are
plural-only in some of their senses, but not
in all. For example:
PLURAL-ONLY
ORDINARY
Eat more greens.
Those greens don't match.
For the first nine of the following give two
examples containing the word in an appro
priate context, one where it has its plural
only sense, and one where it is an ordinary
plural with a contrasting singular form. For
the last item, people, give one example