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to be taken:-- (1) Form the nominative plural according to Secs 39-53 (2) Follow the rule given in Sec. 62. Special Remarks on the Possessive Case. [Sidenote: _Origin of the possessive with its apostrophe._] 64. In Old English a large number of words had in the genitive case singular the ending _-es_; in Middle English still more words took this ending: for example, in Chaucer, "From every _schires_ ende," "Full worthi was he in his _lordes_ werre [war]," "at his _beddes_ syde," "_mannes_ herte [heart]," etc. [Sidenote: _A false theory._] By the end of the seventeenth century the present way of indicating the possessive had become general. The use of the apostrophe, however, was not then regarded as standing for the omitted vowel of the genitive (as _lord's_ for _lordes_): by a false theory the ending was thought to be a contraction of _his_, as schoolboys sometimes write, "George Jones _his_ book." [Sidenote: _Use of the apostrophe._] Though this opinion was untrue, the apostrophe has proved a great convenience, since otherwise words with a plural in _-s_ would have three forms alike. To the eye all the forms are now distinct, but to the ear all may be alike, and the connection must tell us what form is intended. The use of the apostrophe in the plural also began in the seventeenth century, from thinking that _s_ was not a possessive sign, and from a desire to have distinct forms. [Sidenote: _Sometimes_ s _is left out in the possessive singular._] 65. Occasionally the _s_ is dropped in the possessive singular if the word ends in a hissing sound and another hissing sound follows, but the apostrophe remains to mark the possessive; as, _for goodness' sake, Cervantes' satirical work_. In other cases the _s_ is seldom omitted. Notice these three examples from Thackeray's writings: "Harry ran upstairs to his _mistress's_ apartment;" "A postscript is added, as by the _countess's_ command;" "I saw what the _governess's_ views were of the matter." [Sidenote: _Possessive with compound expressions._] 66. In compound expressions, containing words in apposition, a word with a phrase, etc., the possessive sign is usually last, though instances are found with both appositional words marked. Compare the following examples of literary usage:-- Do not the Miss Prys, my neighbors, know the amount of my income, the items of my _son's_, _Captain Scrapegrace's_, tailor's bill--T
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