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![]() wrote in message ... On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 19:05:39 +0100, "Mike Lyle" wrote: That 1709+ sense isn't the "his university" one. Earlier in the entry there are plenty of examples of "his" used for things which aren't possessions. I think Clavox has the wrong end of the stick. And even if he _has_ identified a change, it wouldn't be relevant in the slightest to current formal English, in which "his school" etc are perfectly idiomatic. If he doubts the validity of this attitude, ask him why he isn't talking like the first line of OED's examples. Mike I am not and wasn't after an argument here but has I said it always riles me when I see and hear people saying this kind of thing " HIS firm does this that and the other etc etc" wrong in my book it should be the firm or company he works for does etc etc . Hi, Clavox. Arguments are what we often do round here (AUE) - usually politely. You certainly don't have to use the form yourself, but it equally certainly isn't wrong: grammatical possession isn't ownership in the sense in which property is owned. See Ron's example with the drummer: I really don't see how one can fault, or improve upon, the Biblical "thy neighbour" or "[Jethro] went his way into his own land". -- Mike. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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