Genitive case


In grammar, the genitive case, also called the second case, is the grammatical case that marks a word, usually a noun, as modifying another word, also usually a noun—thus, indicating an attributive relationship of one noun to the other noun. A genitive can also serve purposes indicating other relationships. For example, some verbs may feature arguments in the genitive case; and the genitive case may also have adverbial uses.
Genitive construction includes the genitive case, but is a broader category. Placing a modifying noun in the genitive case is one way of indicating that it is related to a head noun, in a genitive construction. However, there are other ways to indicate a genitive construction. For example, many Afroasiatic languages place the head noun in the construct state.
Possessive grammatical constructions, including the possessive case, may be regarded as a subset of genitive construction. For example, the genitive construction "pack of dogs" is similar, but not identical in meaning to the possessive case "dogs' pack". Modern English is an example of a language that has a possessive case rather than a conventional genitive case. That is, Modern English indicates a genitive construction with either the possessive clitic suffix "-", or a prepositional genitive construction such as "x of y". However, some irregular English pronouns do have possessive forms which may more commonly be described as genitive.
Many languages have a genitive case, including Albanian, Arabic, Armenian, Basque, Czech, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, Georgian, German, Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Irish, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Romanian, Sanskrit, Scottish Gaelic, Kannada, Tamil, Telugu, Turkish and all Slavic languages except Bulgarian and Macedonian.

Functions

Depending on the language, specific varieties of genitive-noun–main-noun relationships may include:
Depending on the language, some of the relationships mentioned above have their own distinct cases different from the genitive.
Possessive pronouns are distinct pronouns, found in Indo-European languages such as English, that function like pronouns inflected in the genitive. They are considered separate pronouns if contrasting to languages where pronouns are regularly inflected in the genitive. For example, English my is either a separate possessive adjective or an irregular genitive of I, while in Finnish, for example, minun is regularly agglutinated from minu- "I" and -n.
In some languages, nouns in the genitive case also agree in case with the nouns they modify. This phenomenon is called suffixaufnahme.
In some languages, nouns in the genitive case may be found in inclusio – that is, between the main noun's article and the noun itself.

Chinese

Cantonese

The particle 嘅 or the possessed noun's classifier is used to denote possession for singular nouns, while the particle 啲 is used for plural nouns.
Examples :
The Hokkien possessive is constructed by using the suffix ê to make the genitive case. For example:
It also uses the suffix chi for classical or official cases. For example:
Some of the Hokkien singular pronouns play the roles of possessive determiners with their nasalized forms. For example:
Still, suffix ê is available for pronouns to express the genitive. For example:

Mandarin

In Mandarin Chinese, the genitive case is made by use of the particle 的.
For instance: 我的猫 wǒ de māo.
However, about persons in relation to one's self, 的 is often dropped when the context allows for it to be easily understood.
For instance: 我妈妈 wǒ māmā and 我的妈妈 wǒ de māmā both mean "my mother".

English

had a genitive case, which has left its mark in modern English in the form of the possessive ending 's, as well as possessive pronoun forms such as his, theirs, etc., and in certain words derived from adverbial genitives such as once and afterwards. The modern English possessive forms are not normally considered to represent a grammatical case, although they are sometimes referred to as genitives or as belonging to a possessive case. One of the reasons that the status of ’s as a case ending is often rejected is that it does not behave as such, but rather as a clitic marking that indicates that a dependency relationship exists between phrases. One can say the Queen’s dress, but also the Queen of England’s dress, where the genitive marker is completely separated from the actual possessor. If it were a genitive case as many other languages have, one would expect something like *the Queen’s of England dress or, to emulate languages with a single consistent genitive case, *the England’s queen’s dress.

Finnic genitives and accusatives

have genitive cases.
In Finnish, prototypically the genitive is marked with -n, e.g. maa – maan "country – of the country". The stem may change, however, with consonant gradation and other reasons. For example, in certain words ending in consonants, -e- is added, e.g. mies – miehen "man – of the man", and in some, but not all words ending in -i, the -i is changed to an -e-, to give -en, e.g. lumi – lumen "snow – of the snow". The genitive is used extensively, with animate and inanimate possessors. In addition to the genitive, there is also a partitive case used for expressing that something is a part of a larger mass, e.g. joukko miehiä "a group of men".
In Estonian, the genitive marker -n has elided with respect to Finnish. Thus, the genitive always ends with a vowel, and the singular genitive is sometimes identical in form to nominative.
In Finnish, in addition to the uses mentioned above, there is a construct where the genitive is used to mark a surname. For example, Juhani Virtanen can be also expressed Virtasen Juhani.
A complication in Finnic languages is that the accusative case -n is homophonic to the genitive case. This case does not indicate possession, but is a syntactic marker for the object, additionally indicating that the action is telic. In Estonian, it is often said that only a "genitive" exists. However, the cases have completely different functions, and the form of the accusative has developed from *-m. This homophony has exceptions in Finnish, where a separate accusative -t is found in pronouns, e.g. kenet "who ", vs. kenen "whose".
A difference is also observed in some of the related Sámi languages, where the pronouns and the plural of nouns in the genitive and accusative are easily distinguishable from each other, e.g., kuä'cǩǩmi "eagles' " and kuä'cǩǩmid "eagles " in Skolt Sami.

German

Formation

Articles

The genitive singular definite article for masculine and neuter nouns is des, while the feminine and plural definite article is der. The indefinite articles are eines for masculine and neuter nouns, and einer for feminine and plural nouns

Nouns

Singular masculine and neuter nouns of the strong declension in the genitive case are marked with -s. Generally, one-syllable nouns favour the -es ending, and it is obligatory with nouns ending with a sibilant such as s or z. Otherwise, a simple -s ending is usual. Feminine and plural nouns remain uninflected:
Singular masculine nouns of the weak declension are marked with an -n ending in the genitive case:
The declension of adjectives in the genitive case is as follows:
MasculineFeminineNeuterPlural
With definite article-en-en-en-en
With indefinite article-en-en-en-en
With no article-en-er-en-er

Personal pronouns

The genitive personal pronouns are quite rare and either very formal, literary or outdated. They are as follows :
NominativeGenitive
ich meiner
du deiner
er seiner
wir unser
ihr euer
Sie Ihrer
sie ihrer

Some examples:
Unlike the personal ones, the genitive relative pronouns are in regular use and are as follows :
NominativeGenitive
Masculinederdessen
Femininediederen
Neuterdasdessen
Pluraldiederen

Some examples:

Nouns

The genitive case is often used to show possession or the relation between nouns:
A simple s is added to the end of a name:
The genitive case is also commonly found after certain prepositions:
The genitive case can sometimes be found in connection with certain adjectives:
The genitive case is occasionally found in connection with certain verbs ; they are mostly either formal or legal:
The ablative case of Indo-European was absorbed into the genitive in Classical Greek. This added to the usages of the "genitive proper", the usages of the "ablatival genitive". The genitive occurs with verbs, adjectives, adverbs and prepositions.

Hungarian

The Hungarian genitive is constructed using the suffix or -e depending on vowel harmony. It is a noun case formed from standalone external possession as a contraction of owner and ownee in one. It serves the role of mine, yours, hers, etc. For example:
In addition, the suffix -i is also used. For example:
The Japanese possessive is constructed by using the suffix -no 〜の to make the genitive case. For example:
It also uses the suffix -na 〜な for adjectival noun; in some analyses adjectival nouns are simply nouns that take -na in the genitive, forming a complementary distribution.
The archaic genitive case particle -ga ~が is still retained in certain expressions, place names, and dialects.
Typically, languages have nominative case nouns converting into genitive case. It has been found, however, that Japanese will in rare cases allow accusative case to convert to genitive, if specific conditions are met in the clause in which the conversion appears. This is referred to as "Accusative-Genitive conversion."

Korean

The genitive in Korean can be formed using the particle -ui '의', although this particle is normally elided in Modern Korean, which leaves the genitive unmarked. Only some personal pronouns retain a distinctive genitive which comes from the amalgamation of the pronoun plus -ui '의'
But, Modern Korean: igeoseun geu namja jadongchayeyo. 이것은 그 남자 자동차예요.
Korean Personal PronounsNominativeLiterary GenitiveModern Genitive
I 저 jeo저의 jeo-ui제 je
I 나 na나의 na-ui내 nae
You 너 neo너의 neo-ui네 ne

의 is used to mark possession, relation, origination, containment, description/limitation, partition, being an object of a metaphor, or modification.

Latin

The genitive is one of the cases of nouns and pronouns in Latin. Latin genitives still have certain modern scientific uses:
The Irish language also uses a genitive case. For example, in the phrase bean an tí, is the genitive case of teach, meaning "house". Another example is barr an chnoic, "top of the hill", where cnoc means "hill", but is changed to chnoic, which also incorporates lenition.

Persian

had a true genitive case inherited from Proto-Indo-European. By the time of Middle Persian, the genitive case had been lost and replaced by an analytical construction which is now called Ezāfe. This construction was inherited by New Persian, and was also later borrowed into numerous other Iranic, Turkic and Indo-Aryan languages of Western and South Asia.

Semitic languages

Genitive case marking existed in Proto-Semitic, Akkadian, and Ugaritic. It indicated possession, and it is preserved today only in Arabic.

Akkadian

Arabic

Called المجرور al-majrūr in Arabic, the genitive case functions both as an indication of ownership and for nouns following a preposition.
The Arabic genitive marking also appears after prepositions.
The Semitic genitive should not be confused with the pronominal possessive suffixes that exist in all the Semitic languages

Slavic languages

With the exception of Bulgarian and Macedonian, all Slavic languages decline the nouns and adjectives in accordance with the genitive case using a variety of endings depending on the word's lexical category, its gender, and number.

Possessives

To indicate possession the ending of the noun indicating the possessor changes depending on the word's ending in the nominative case.
For example, to a, u, i or y in Polish, а, я, ы or и in Russian, and similar cases in other Slavic languages.
Possessives can also be formed by the construction "u jest " / "У есть ".
In sentences where the possessor includes an associated pronoun, the pronoun also changes:
And in sentences denoting negative possession, the ending of the object noun also changes:
Note that the Polish phrase "nie ma " can work both as a negation of having or a negation of an existence of ,
but the meaning of the two sentences and its structure is different.
Note that the Russian word "нет" is a contraction of "не" + "есть".
In Russian there is no distinction between not having an and not being present at 's.

To express negation

The genitive case is also used in sentences expressing negation, even when no possessive relationship is involved. The ending of the subject noun changes just as it does in possessive sentences. The genitive, in this sense, can only be used to negate nominative, accusative and genitive sentences, and not other cases.
Use of genitive for negation is obligatory in Slovene, Polish and Old Church Slavonic. The East Slavic languages employ either the accusative or genitive for negation, although the genitive is more commonly used. In Czech, Slovak and Serbo-Croatian, negating with the genitive case is perceived as rather archaic and the accusative is preferred, but genitive negation in these languages is still not uncommon, especially in music and literature.

Partial direct object

The genitive case is used with some verbs and mass nouns to indicate that the action covers only a part of the direct object, whereas similar constructions using the Accusative case denote full coverage. Compare the sentences:
In Russian, special partitive case or sub-case is observed for some uncountable nouns which in some contexts have preferred alternative form on -у/ю instead of standard genitive on -а/я: выпил чаю, but сорта чая.

Prepositional constructions

The genitive case is also used in many prepositional constructions.
The Turkish possessive is constructed using two suffixes: a genitive case for the possessor and a possessive suffix for the possessed object. For example:

Albanian

The genitive in Albanian is formed with the help of clitics. For example:
If the possessed object is masculine, the clitic is i. If the possessed object is feminine, the clitic is e. If the possessed object is plural, the clitic is e regardless of the gender.
The genitive is used with some prepositions: me anë, nga ana, për arsye, për shkak, me përjashtim, në vend.

Kannada

In Kannada, the genitive case-endings are:
for masculine or feminine nouns ending in "ಅ" : ನ
for neuter nouns ending in "ಅ" : ದ
for all nouns ending in "ಇ", "ಈ", "ಎ", or "ಏ" : ಅ
for all nouns ending in "ಉ", "ಊ", "ಋ", or "ೠ" : ಇನ
Most postpositions in Kannada take the genitive case.

Tamil

In Tamil, the genitive case ending is the word உடைய or இன், which signifies possession. Depending on the last letter of the noun, the genitive case endings may vary.
If the last letter is a consonant, like க், ங், ச், ஞ், ட், ண், த், ந், ப், ம், ய், ர், ல், வ், ழ், then the suffix உடைய/இன் gets added. *Examples: His: அவன் + உடைய = அவனுடைய, Doctor's: மருத்துவர் + உடைய = மருத்துவருடைய, மருத்துவர் + இன் = மருத்துவரின் Kumar's: குமார் + உடைய = குமாருடைய, குமார்+ இன் = குமாரின்