POSSESSIVE FORM
89. There is just one more change made in the form of a noun, and that is when we wish to show who or what owns or possesses a thing. Thus we write:
- John's book.
- The boy's hat.
And since this form of the noun denotes possession, it is called the possessive form. Some grammarians call this the possessive case.
The possessive form of nouns is made by adding an apostrophe and s, ('s); thus, day's, lady's, girl's, clerk's.
To plural nouns ending in s add only an apostrophe; thus, days', ladies', girls', clerks'.
When plural nouns do not end in s, their possessive forms are made by adding the apostrophe and s, the same as singular nouns, thus:
- They make men's and women's shoes.
90. In words which end with a sound that resembles that of s, the apostrophe with s forms an additional syllable. Thus:
- James's (pronounced James-ez.)
- Mr. Lynch's (pronounced Lynch-ez.)
The only exception to the rule occurs when the addition of another s would make too many hissing sounds, then we add the apostrophe alone. Thus:
- For goodness' sake.
- In Jesus' name.
91. In forming the possessive of compound nouns, the possessive sign is always placed at the end, thus:
- My son-in-law's sister.
- The man-of-war's cannon.
92. When we wish to show that a thing belongs to two or more persons who are joint owners of it, we add the possessive sign to the last word only, thus:
- Carson, Price and Scott's store.
- Mason and Hamlin's pianos.
If it is a separate ownership that we wish to denote, we place the possessive sign after each name, thus:
- Bring me John's and Mary's books.
- Lee's and Grant's armies met in battle.
Remember that the noun has just three changes in form, one for the plural number, one to denote gender and one for the possessive form. Watch carefully your own language and that of your friends and note if these changes are correctly made.
Exercise 3
Write the plural form of each of the following:
- ax
- beef
- chief
- hero
- knife
- T
- hoof
- man-of-war
- axis
- basis
- cherry
- leaf
- son-in-law
- Mr. Smith
- thief
- Doctor Wood
- alley
- buffalo
- chimney
- staff
- Frenchman
- Miss Brown
- ox
- spoonful
- alto
- calf
- cargo
- two
- 3
- tooth
- foot
- turkey
Exercise 4
Underscore the nouns in the following:
How many abstract nouns?
How many concrete?
How many singular?
How many plural?
FIVE AND FIFTY
Charlotte Perkins Gilman
If fifty men did all the work
And gave the price to five;
And let those five make all the rules—
You'd say the fifty men were fools,
Unfit to be alive.
And if you heard complaining cries
From fifty brawny men,
Blaming the five for graft and greed,
Injustice, cruelty indeed—
What would you call them then?
Not by their own superior force
Do five on fifty live,
But by election and assent—
And privilege of government—
Powers that the fifty give.
If fifty men are really fools—
And five have all the brains—
The five must rule as now we find;
But if the fifty have the mind—
Why don't they take the reins?
Exercise 5
Select all the nouns in the following. Write their singular, plural and possessive forms. Decide whether they are abstract or concrete, common or proper or collective, masculine, feminine or neuter.
Brother!
Whoever you are, wherever you are on all the earth, I greet you.
I extend to you my right hand.
I make you a pledge.
Here is my pledge to you:—
I refuse to kill your father. I refuse to slay your mother's son. I refuse to plunge a bayonet into the breast of your sister's brother. I refuse to slaughter your sweetheart's lover. I refuse to murder your wife's husband. I refuse to butcher your little child's father. I refuse to wet the earth with blood and blind kind eyes with tears. I refuse to assassinate you and then hide my stained fists in the folds of any flag.
Will you thus pledge me and pledge all the members of our working class?—Kirkpatrick.
SPELLING
LESSON 4
Some of our consonants also have more than one sound. We have also certain combinations of consonants which represent one sound. This combination of two letters to represent one sound is called a digraph, as gh, in cough, ch in church. A digraph may either be a combination of two consonants or of two vowels or of a vowel and a consonant. The following table contains the consonants which have more than one sound:
- c—k as in cat
- c—s as in vice
- g—j as in ginger
- g—hard as in go
- s—sh as in sure
- s—zh as in usual
- s—soft as in also
- s—z as in does
- x—soft as in extra
- x—gz as in exist
The following table gives the digraphs most commonly used:
- ng—as in ring, tongue
- ch—as in church and much
- ch—k as in chasm
- ch—sh as in chagrin
- th—as in then, those
- th—as in thin and worth
- ce—sh as in ocean
- ci—sh as in special
- dg—j as in edge
- gh—f as in rough
- ph—f as in sylph
- qu—kw as in quart
- qu—k as in conquer
- sh—as in shall
- si—sh as in tension
- si—zh as in vision
- ti—sh as in motion
The use of these digraphs gives us a number of additional sounds. Notice the use of the consonants which have more than one sound and also the digraphs in the spelling lesson for the week. Mark the consonants and digraphs.
Monday
- Commence
- Certain
- General
- Gradual
- Sugar
Tuesday
- Soldier
- Season
- Pleasure
- Exact
- Exercise
Wednesday
- Singular
- Chemistry
- Chapter
- Machine
- Changing
Thursday
- Theory
- Thither
- Ocean
- Racial
- Budget
Friday
- Philosophy
- Enough
- Quorum
- Bouquet
- Phonetic
Saturday
- Permission
- Asia
- Attention
- Marshall
- Martial
PLAIN ENGLISH
LESSON 5
Dear Comrade:
We want to say just a word about the lesson assignment. This has been arranged on a schedule of days merely to assist you in systematizing your time and making the most of the leisure at your disposal. It is not intended that you should slavishly follow it. We thoroughly believe in individuality and all that contributes toward its development. But we are also confident that many foolish things are done in the name of liberty. Whenever we set ourselves to the performance of any task we necessarily limit our activities in some other direction. Power comes by concentration of force. Whenever we combine with others for the accomplishment of any purpose, it becomes necessary to have some plan of action and we give and take for the end which we have in view. The musician because he follows the law of harmony in music has not given up his liberty. He has only found a new freedom which enables him to make glorious music where only discord reigned before. System in our work does not mean loss of liberty or of individuality but only finding a channel through which individuality can flow into the great ocean of real freedom.
So use this suggestive lesson assignment to meet your own need and find expression for your real individuality in full freedom.
This is the first of several lessons concerning verbs. The verb is perhaps the most difficult part of speech to thoroughly master, so do not be discouraged if there are some parts of this lesson you do not understand. Succeeding lessons will clear up these difficult points. Keep your eyes open as you read every day, and be careful of your spelling and pronunciation.
Some of us mis-spell the common words which we see and use every day. In a student's letter we recently noted that, with our letter before him in which the word was printed in large type and correctly spelled, he spelled College, Colledge.
Do not be satisfied with half-way things or less than that which is worthy of you. Demand the best for yourself. Read aloud this little verse from the Good Grey Poet, Walt Whitman:
"O, the joy of a manly self-hood;
To be servile to none, to defer to none, not to any tyrant known or unknown,
To walk with erect carriage, a step springy and elastic,
To look with calm gaze or with a flashing eye,
To speak with a full and sonorous voice out of a broad chest,
To confront with your personality all the other personalities of the earth."
Yours for Education,
THE PEOPLE'S COLLEGE.
THE WORD THAT ASSERTS
93. You remember when we studied sentences we found that we could not have a sentence without a verb or a word that asserts. The life of a sentence is the verb, for without the verb we cannot assert, question or command. It was on account of this importance that the Romans called the verb, verbum, which meant the word. Verbs, like nouns, are divided into classes.
94. In some of our sentences the verb alone is enough to make a complete assertion, but in other sentences we use verbs that need to be followed by one or more words to complete the assertion. Notice the following sentences:
- The boy ran.
- The boy found the ball.
- The earth revolves.
- The earth is round.
Do you notice any difference in the verbs used in these sentences? Notice that the verbs ran and revolves make the complete assertion about their subjects. Notice the verbs found and is. These are not complete without the addition of the words ball and round. If we say The boy found, The earth is, you at once ask, The boy found WHAT? The earth is WHAT? The sense is incomplete without the addition of these words ball and round. A part of the thought is unexpressed; but when we say The boy found the ball, The earth is round, the sense is complete.
So we have two classes of verbs, COMPLETE AND INCOMPLETE VERBS.
95. An incomplete verb is one that requires the addition of one or more words to complete its meaning.
The word or words added to an incomplete verb to complete its meaning are called the complement.
A complete verb is one that requires no complement to complete its meaning.
96. You can readily tell when a verb is complete and when it is incomplete by asking the question What? If you put the question what after the verb, and it makes a sensible question the verb is incomplete. For example:
- Farmers raise—what?
- The employer discharged—what?
- We were—what?
- The earth is—what?
If the question what? does not make sense after the verb, then the verb is complete. For example:
- The sun shines.
- Water flows.
- Men work.
The question what after these verbs would not make sense, as:
- The sun shines—what?
- Men work—what?
- Water flows—what?
So these verbs are complete verbs.
97. The same verb, however, may be complete or incomplete, according to the way in which it is used. For example:
- The corn grows.
- The farmer grows corn.
In the sentence, Corn grows, grows is a complete verb. You could not say The corn grows—what? for it does not grow anything. It merely grows, and the verb grows in this sense is a complete verb. But in the sentence, The farmer grows corn, you are using the verb grows in a slightly different sense. It is an incomplete verb, for you do not mean, The farmer grows, but you mean that the farmer grows CORN.
Exercise 1
In the following sentences, underscore the complete verbs with one line, the incomplete with two lines. Ask the question what? after each verb to determine whether it is complete or incomplete.
- He returned today.
- He returned the book.
- The rose smells sweet.
- He smelled the rose.
- The trees shake in the wind.
- The wind shakes the trees.
- The ship plows through the waves.
- The farmer plows the field.
- The birds sing sweetly.
- They sang the Marseillaise.
- He worries over the matter.
- The matters worry him.
- The table feels rough.
- He feels the rough surface.
- It tastes bitter.
- He tasted the bitter dregs.