'Possession', in the context of
linguistics, is an asymmetric relationship between two constituents, the
referent of one of which (the 'possessor') possesses (owns, rules over, has as a part, has as a relative, etc.) the referent of the other.
Possession may be marked in many ways, such as simple
juxtaposition of nouns, a
possessive case, a
construct state (for example, see
Arabic grammar: state), or
adpositions (
possessive suffixes,
possessive adjectives). For example, English uses a possessive
clitic (
'''s'') and a preposition, ''of''.
Alienable and inalienable
There are many types of possession, but a common distinction is alienable versus
inalienable possession. Alienability refers to the ability to dissociate something from its parent — in this case, a quality from its owner.
When something is inalienably possessed, it is usually an attribute: for example, John's big nose is inalienably possessed, because it cannot (without surgery) be removed from John — it's simply a quality he has. In contrast, 'my briefcase' is alienably possessed — it can be separated from me.
Many languages make this distinction in some way. Saying something like 'I have my dad's big nose' with the latter noun-phrase marked inalienable would imply some sort of genetic inheritance; marked alienable, it would imply that you had cut off your father's nose or somesuch and were actually in physical possession of it. English does not have a grammatical feature to make such distinctions.
Possessive pronouns in
Hawaiian are associated with nouns distinguishing between ''o''-class, ''a''-class and neutral pronouns according to the relationship of possessor and possessed. ''O''-class possessive pronouns are used if the possessive relationship cannot be begun or ended by the possessor.
Inherent and non-inherent
Another distinction, which is similar to alienable vs. inalienable possession, is inherent vs. non-inherent possession. In languages that mark this distinction, inherently possessed nouns, e.g., body parts, cannot be mentioned without also mentioning the possessor. So, you cannot say just 'a hand', but must also explicitly say whose hand it is. Several
Papuan languages, for instance
Mangga Buang, combine alienable/inalienable and inherent/non-inherent marking.
Possessable and unpossessable
Many languages, such as the
Maasai language, distinguish between the possessable and the unpossessable. Possessable things include farm animals, tools, houses, family members and money, while for instance wild animals, landscape features and weather phenomena cannot be possessed. Basically this means that, in such languages, saying 'my brother' is okay, but 'my land' would be grammatically incorrect. Instead, one would have to use a circumlocution such as 'the land that I own'.
Animate and inanimate
In some languages, different possession verbs ("have" in English) are used depending on whether the object is
animate or inanimate. Compare the two examples in
Georgian:
:''Kompiuteri 'makvs''' ("I have a computer")
:''Dzaghli 'mqavs''' ("I have a dog")
Since a dog is animate, and a computer is not, different verbs are used. However some nouns in Georgian (such as ''car'') are considered animate, and, therefore, employ the same verb as any other animate objects.
References
Heine, Bernd (1997) Possession: Cognitive Sources, Forces, and Grammaticalization. Cambridge University Press.(ISBN-13: 9780521024136 | ISBN-10: 0521024137)
See also
★
Genitive case
★
Possessive adjective
★
Possessive case
★
Possessive pronoun
★
Possessive suffix