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I know that to mark possession of an item you can use 's like in the following example:

The user's password shall not be blank.

However, is it correct to use the following:

The car's antenna is embedded in the windshield.

I seem to remember that possession must only be used for people but I'm not certain really.

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5 Answers 5

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There is a bias against the genitive case with inanimate things, that is sometimes found in advice to avoid it in some cases. In some cases that advice is indeed, that one should only use it with people and sometimes that one should only use it with living things. (So "the dog's" is allowed, but "the car's" is not).

Fowler raged against it, and blamed headlines' need for brevity (or as he would rather say, the need for brevity of headlines).

The rule was never consistent, for some inanimate words of one syllable would generally be accepted as being allowed with such a construct, but there really wasn't a clear rule expressing which these were.

This has largely died away, with those who favour the apostrophe form winning, but it does linger and some people will still give the advice that you "seem to remember".

This disagreement stems from an earlier disagreement in early Modern English, that in turn stems from one in Middle English.

In Middle English, his served as both neuter and masculine genitive pronoun. During this period, some used it (note the lack of any s) for the neuter genitive pronoun, but in formal use, it remained his into the Modern English period.

Now, in the beginning of the Modern English period, some started using it's that applies the genitive with an 's to it much as Fred's does to Fred (indeed while it's now considered a classic error to use it's when you mean its, this didn't die out entirely until the 1800s), some used its - dropping the apostrophe and gaining distinction from it's meaning it is along with mirroring theirs, hers etc., and some where still using his.

So, much as we today may wonder whether we should use e-mail or email, C.D.'s or CDs and whether it was okay to start a sentence with However, because there is a difference of opinions, so too would somebody writing between 1604 and 1611 writing a work that they wanted to be in plain but respectable English wonder whether they should use his or its.

On the one side there would be those who said that its was now more common, and more clearly understood as having a neuter gender while his was rather stuffy and not the vernacular speech of the common man (an important point to 17th Century Protestants). On the other would be those who said that his is the formal form, and hence more respectable, and besides which if they wanted this work to still read clearly in decades to come then they should avoid slangy new words like its that might die out again and leave people saying "dude, the 1610s called, they want their bible back". (This explanation may have more words and expressions that made no sense in the early 17th Century than it strictly should).

For this reason, the King James Bible avoids use of both its and his (in the neuter sense) and instead favoured a very heavy use of of and thereof.

So, where the New Revised Standard Version has Genesis 2:19 as:

So out of the ground the Lord God formed every animal of the field and every bird of the air, and brought them to the man to see what he would call them; and whatever the man called every living creature, that was its name. [Emphasis mine]

The King James Version has it as:

And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof. [Emphasis mine].

Now, the KJV did not avoid the genitive apostrophe itself:

And he looked, and behold a well in the field, and, lo, there were three flocks of sheep lying by it; for out of that well they watered the flocks: and a great stone was upon the well's mouth.

However, clearly avoiding the genitive when you would be using a neuter pronoun will reduce the number of times you use the genitive with a non-living thing (and with a living thing of indeterminate gender), and increase the number you favour other constructs. And the King James Version bible has had a long history as being the model for what people understand good English and/or formal English to sound like. It was the only book many people read or heard read, and even for the educated it was the single book that many read or heard read most often.

Hence people became used to hearing the genitive avoided in many cases of non-living things or animals of indeterminate gender. Hence even when the pronouns weren't used, people came to avoid the genitive in such cases.

So even when the genitive would not involve a pronoun at all, people would favour other constructs. This also goes some way to explain the love lawyers have of horribly convoluted sentences that end with thereof - while it does add precision in some cases, in many it's just a form of hyper-formal use that is trying to sound clever (this isn't necessarily an insult to lawyers, in many cases when you engage a lawyer you don't just want them to make their case for you, but also to convince the other party that you have a clever lawyer, so that's actually part of their job).

Ironically though, this history also argues against it. The difficulty someone in the 16th through to the 17th Centuries had in picking between two neuter genitive pronouns in itself shows that it was permissible to use genitive inflection with non-living things, and always has been. If we can do it with pronouns (and we now have its quite clearly as the choice to go for), then we can do it with nouns. And there's the fact that the KJV used it itself (h/t to Peter Shor).

So, in all, "The car's antenna" is fine, "The antenna of the car" would still be favoured by some, and "Its antenna" is also fine, though the KJV would have used "the antenna thereof".

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    @PeterShor You do make a good point that the KJV didn't avoid it, itself, that I shall edit to make use of.
    – Jon Hanna
    Commented Jan 15, 2013 at 16:00
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    Mine left, to give credit where it is due ;)
    – Jon Hanna
    Commented Jan 15, 2013 at 16:29
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Possessor doesn't need to be a living being.

The town's hall

The university's information center

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  • The opposition attitude and the opposition's attitude, both are correct well.
    – Anubhav
    Commented Jun 30, 2016 at 11:33
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    But not that "town hall" and "the town's hall" do not mean the same thing. The former is the seat of a town or city's government and the building it now or formerly inhabited. The latter is any hall of any kind in a town, that happens to be the only hall of any kind in that town! Commented Jan 9, 2020 at 15:46
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Possessives in English are much more common with animate possessors, but they are not restricted to them, so no, there is no problem with "the car's antenna".

@Hamid: the possessed object is generally definite, so "the town's hall" is unusual, and implies that there is only one hall in town. "The town's concert hall" is less odd.

@The MYYN: the problem with saying "car is in the genitive case" is that that does not cover common English expressions like "The girl next door's coat". Grammatical case is a concept which barely applies in English.

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  • "The town's hall" implies "town hall", a common phrase in the US, and there would indeed be only one. Commented Aug 16, 2010 at 15:15
  • I take issue here—case is very important in English, and does still surface in many cases. The 's definitely does signify the genitive, at least in spirit, especially from a historical perspective.
    – Charlie
    Commented Aug 16, 2010 at 16:31
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    @itrekkie: Historically, yes it was a genitive. It does still indicate possession (or association). But referring to it as "genitive case" in my view is unhelpful, and sometimes misleading. Is "girl" in the genitive in "the girl next door's coat"?
    – Colin Fine
    Commented Aug 17, 2010 at 16:01
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    @Neil: "Town hall" is a common phrase in the UK too, and elsewhere. But the example was "The town's hall" which is entirely different from "town hall", and, I maintain, would not be said by a native speaker unless there were only one hall (not just one Town Hall") in town. "The town's town hall", on the other hand, is perfectly acceptable (though perhaps a little unlikely to be said).
    – Colin Fine
    Commented Aug 17, 2010 at 16:05
  • I think any construction using to "definitely does signify the dative, at least in spirit, especially from a historical perspective." And any construction using from does the same job on the ablative case. Of course those were I-E cases; one could also find examples for just about any other construction or punctuation, since the definition is so broad. English has case left only on a few personal pronouns, and there it's disappearing fast, like number and gender. Commented Sep 8, 2023 at 18:29
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In

The car's antenna is embedded in the windshield.

car is in the genitive case, here in a classifying genitive. One could also write

The antenna of the car ...

The use of the apostrophe is not dependent on the noun representing people. Using -'s is correct.

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  • car is in the genitive, but is not marked morphologically. Rather the marker is post positioned after the entire NP, the car. I would be especially interested in some analysis of the structure considering 's functions as a determiner.
    – Charlie
    Commented Aug 16, 2010 at 16:43
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As I’ve said in answer to a related question, it’s misleading to think of the apostrophe exclusively as a possessive marker. It’s more helpful to think of it as a genitive inflection, certainly capable of expressing possession (John’s car), but also used to specify or classify the reference of a noun (the girl’s face, a bird’s nest or, indeed, the car’s antenna), to indicate time and place (a week’s holiday, the country’s capital) and to refer to a noun that is understood from the context (I’m going to a friend’s (house), Macy’s (store)).

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  • Strongly agree. Occasionally one makes a distinction between possessive and genitive. For example, my hat uses a possessive determiner, whereas that’s mine uses a genitive pronoun. You couldn’t call it a genitive determiner, and possessive pronoun will just provoke useless argument.
    – tchrist
    Commented Feb 19, 2012 at 21:38

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