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Doctors visits
Doctors visits






doctors visits

The authors describe the pair of phrases thusly: O’Conner and Stewart Kellerman identify "doctor's appointment" on their excellent Grammarphobia blog. There are a number of categories within the genitive case, among them the "genitive of origin," which we see in "the cat's meow." Another is the "descriptive genitive," which is exactly how Patricia T. For our purposes, we'll stick with genitive case, which is more easily understood as being about control and association as well as ownership. (This is largely because of one very influential 18th century grammarian, Bishop Lowth, who thought "possessive case" was the better term.) This is fine except that because of the meaning of the word possess, it in some cases muddies the semantic waters. In fact, when people talk about the genitive case in modern English they mostly call it the possessive case. The genitive case is a lot like the possessive case. We'll explain: the genitive is a grammatical case (quick review: a grammatical case is, a semantic relational category apparent in the varying forms a noun, pronoun, or adjective has) that shows that someone or something owns, controls, or is associated with someone or something else. "Ah, of course, the genitive," says almost no one. The 's in "the cat's meow" marks not the possessive (in the strict sense of that word) but the genitive, and specifically what we can call the genitive of origin. Let's turn to the phrase "the cat's meow." It isn't so much that the meow belongs to the cat as it is that the meow comes from the cat. Though we recognize that it is deeply controversial to say so, 's is sometimes a marker of the plural, as in "mind your p's and q's" and "a pattern of x's." It also functions as the contracted form of us in let's and the contracted form of is in the likes of it's, she's, and he's.īut there's also the 's that looks at first glance like a regular possessive marker but that is actually something else. The most common function of the 's in English is to show possession, as in "the cat's bowl." There are other ways to show possession-"the bowl of the cat," for example-but 's is the way it's most often done.īut that isn't all that 's does. Just why either is fine is more complicated-so read on, language enthusiast. Why do most of us say "doctor's appointment"? The simple answer is that it's convention. If you're like the majority of English speakers you'll say "doctor's appointment," even though nothing is wrong with the less common "doctor appointment." Do you say you have a "doctor's appointment" or a "doctor appointment"? Let's say you're due for your annual checkup.








Doctors visits