Possessive affix

In linguistics, a possessive affix is a suffix or prefix attached to a noun to indicate it is possessor, much in the manner of possessive adjectives. Possessive suffixes are found in some Austronesian, Uralic, Altaic, Semitic, and Indo-European languages. Complicated systems are found in the Uralic languages; for example, Nenets has 27 (3×3×3) different types of forms distinguish the possessor (first, second, third person), the number of possessors (singular, dual, plural) and the number of objects (singular, dual, plural). This allows Nenets speakers to express the phrase "many houses of us two" in one word. Mayan languages and Nahuan languages also have possessive prefixes.

Possessive suffixes in various languages

Finnish

Finnish is one language that uses possessive suffixes. The number of possessors and their person can be distinguished for the singular and plural, except for the third person. However, the construction hides the number of possessed objects when the singular objects are in nominative or genitive case and plural objects in nominative case; käteni may mean either "my hand" (subject or direct object), "of my hand" (genitive) or "my hands" (subject or direct object). For example, the following are the forms of talo (house), declined to show possession:

personnumberFinnish wordEnglish phrase
first-personsingulartalonimy house(s)
pluraltalommeour house(s)
second-personsingulartalosiyour (sing.) house(s)
pluraltalonneyour (pl.) house(s)
third-persontalonsahis/her/their house(s)

The grammatical cases are not affected by the possessive suffix, except for the accusative case (-n or unmarked), which is left unmarked by anything but the possessive suffix. The third-person suffix is used only if the possessor is the subject. For example, Mari maalasi talonsa "Mari painted her house", cf. the use of the genitive case in Toni maalasi Marin talon "Toni painted Mari's house". (The -n on the word talon is the accusative case homophonic to the genitive case.)

For emphasis or clarification, the possessor can be given outside the word as well, using the genitive case. In this case, the possessive suffix remains. For example, my house can be taloni or minun taloni, where minun is the genitive form of the first-person singular pronoun.

Omission of the possessive suffix makes it possible to distinguish the plural for the possessed objects, although this is not considered proper language; e.g. mun käsi "my hand" vs. mun kädet "my hands". Systematic omission of possessive suffixes is found in spoken Finnish, wherever a pronoun in the genitive is used. However, this is found only in direct address, e.g. "Their coats are dry" is Niiden takit on kuivia (niiden lit. "they's"). Contrast this with indirect possession, as in "They took their coats", where the possessive suffix is used: Ne otti takkinsa. Even in proper Finnish, the pronouns sen and niiden, (which are the demonstrative as well as inanimate forms of hänen and heidän,) do not impose possessive suffixes except indirectly – it would be hypercorrect to ever say niiden talonsa. There is also a distinction in meaning in the third person depending on whether or not the third person possessive pronoun is used:

He ottivat (omat) takkinsa. = "They took their (own) coats." (The possessor cannot be mentioned, even for emphasis, when it the same as the subject.)
He ottivat heidän takkinsa. = "They took their (others') coats." (When a third person pronoun is mentioned as the possessor, it must refer to someone other than the subject of the sentence.)

Hungarian

Hungarian is another Uralic language, distantly related to Finnish. It follows approximately the same rules as given above for Finnish, except that it has no genitive case. So, to say (for example), "Maria's house," one would say Mária háza (where háza means "her/his/its house").

See also Possessive suffixes in the article Hungarian grammar (noun phrases).

Arabic

Arabic, a Semitic language, uses personal suffixes, also classified as enclitic pronouns, for the genitive and accusative cases of the personal pronouns. The genitive and accusative forms are identical, except for the 1st person singular, which is in genitive and -nī in accusative case. They can be used with nouns, expressing possession, with prepositions, which require the genitive case, or with verbs, expressing the object. Examples for personal suffixes expressing possession, using the word بيت bayt(u) (house) as a base:

personsingulardualplural
1st personبيتي baytī my houseبيتنا baytunā our house
2nd person (masc.)بيتك baytuka your houseبيتكما baytukumā your (du.) houseبيتكم baytukum your house
2nd person (fem.)بيتك baytuki your houseبيتكن baytukunna your house
3rd person (masc.)بيته baytuhu his houseبيتهما baytuhumā their (du.) houseبيتهم baytuhum their house
3rd person (fem.)بيتها baytuhā her houseبيتهن baytuhunna their house

Hebrew

In Hebrew, a Northwest Semitic language, possessive suffixes are optional; they are more common in formal, archaic, or poetic language, and they are also more common on certain nouns than on others. For instance, my home can be written בֵּיתִי (beiti). However, the following are some different ways to express possession, using the word בַּיִת (bayit, house) as a base:

  • my house: בֵּיתִי beiti (house-my), הַבַּיִת שֶׁלִּי ha-bayit sheli (the-house of-me)
  • your (masc., sing.) house: בֵּיתְךָ beitkha (house-your), הַבַּיִת שֶׁלְּךָ ha-bayit shelkha (the-house of-you)
  • Adam's house: בֵּית אָדָם beit Adam (house-of Adam), בֵּיתוֹ שֶׁל אָדָם beito shel Adam (house-his of Adam), הַבַּיִת שֶׁל אָדָם ha-bayit shel Adam (the-house of Adam)

Assyrian

In Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, a modern Aramaic language, possessive pronouns are suffixes that are attached to the end of nouns to express possession similar to the English pronouns my, your, his, her, etc., which reflects the gender and plurality of the person or persons.[1]

personsingularplural
1st personbĕtī (my house)bĕtan (our house)
2nd person (masc.)bĕtūkh (your house)bĕtōkhun (your house)
2nd person (fem.)bĕtakh (your house)bĕtōkhun (your house)
3rd person (masc.)bĕtū (his house)betĕh (their house)
3rd person (fem.)bĕtō (her house)bĕtĕh (their house)

Although possessive suffixes are more convenient and common, they can be optional for some people and seldom used, especially among those with the Tyari and Barwari dialects. The following are the alternative ways to express possession, using the word "bĕtā" (house) as a base:

  • my house: bĕtā it dēyi ("house of mine")
  • your (masc., sing.) house: bĕtā it dēyūkh ("house of yours")
  • your (fem., sing.) house: bĕtā it dēyakh
  • your (plural) house: bĕtā it dēyōkhūn ("house of yours")
  • 3rd person (masc., sing.): bĕtā it dēyū ("house of his")
  • 3rd person (fem., sing.): bĕtā it dēyō ("house of hers")
  • 3rd person (plural): bĕtā it dēyĕh ("house of theirs")

Persian

In Persian, which is an Indo-European language, possessive suffixes are found:

personSuffix
1st person singular-am
2nd person singular-at
3rd person singular-aš
1st person plural-emân
2nd person plural-etân
3rd person plural-ešân

e.g. pedar-am my father; barâdar-aš his/her brother

Tamazight

Central Morocco Tamazight's use of possessive suffixes mirrors that of many other Afro-Asiatic languages.

Possessive Suffixes[2]
Person Possessive
suffix
(Ayt Ayache) (Ayt Seghrouchen)
I /-(i)nw/1
you (ms) /-nʃ/ /-nːs/
you (fs) /-nːm/
he /-ns/ /-nːs/
she
we /-nːɣ/ /-nːx/
you (mp) /-nːun/
you (fp) /-nːkʷnt/ /-nːʃnt/
they (m) /-nsn/ /-nːsn/
they (f) /-nsnt/ /-nːsnt/
  1. -inw is used when the noun ends in a consonant

Independent possessives are formed by attaching the possessive suffixes to /wi-/ (if the object possessed is masculine) or /ti-/' (for feminine), e.g. /winw/ ('mine').

Turkish

personsingularTranslationpluralTranslation
1st personevimmy houseevimizour house
2nd personevinyour houseevinizyour house
3rd personevihis/her houseevleritheir house

Bahasa Melayu

In the Malay language (Bahasa Melayu), the following suffixes can be added to nouns to indicate possession.

PersonExampleTranslation
1st personnegaraku (contraction of negara aku)my country
2nd personnegaramu (contraction of negara kamu)your country
3rd personnegaranyahis/her country

Not all pronouns are added in this way; most are written as separate words. For example, your country can also be written as negara anda or negara engkau, and our country as negara kita (if the reader is included) or negara kami (if the reader is excluded).

References

  1. Zwicky, Arnold M. "Clitics and Particles." Language 61.2 (1985): 283-305. Print.
  2. Abdel-Massih, Ernest T. (1971). A Reference Grammar of Tamazight. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan. pp. 35–40, 46, 77–80.
  1. ^ (in Finnish) Johanna Laakso. Uralilaiset kansat. Tietoa suomen sukukielistä ja niiden puhujista. WSOY 1991.

See also

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