genitivepluspossessive
Genitivepluspossessive is a term used in linguistics to describe a noun phrase that bears both genitive case marking and possessive morphology, resulting in a double-marked possessive relationship. The phenomenon arises in languages with explicit case systems or rich affixal possessive marking, and it can also appear as a diachronic layering where historical forms accumulate additional markers over time. In practice, genitivepluspossessive signals a strong or explicit link of possession or association between two nominals, sometimes with functional or emphatic nuances.
In typological terms, genitivepluspossessive constructions typically involve two simultaneous grammatical marks: a genitive marker on the
Examples are often hypothetical in descriptions of genitivepluspossessive, but a schematic form can be glossed as:
See also: genitive case, possessive construction, double genitive, possessive morphology.