can be difficult to tell whether the genitive is being used subjectively or
objectively, to the point of complete ambiguity. Thus the phrase
godes
lufu is, at least out of context, ambiguous, since it could mean either ‘the
love God has (for someone)’, or ‘the love someone has for God’. Of
course, exactly the same holds for present-day English. Other types of
genitive include the descriptive genitive found in, for example:
(25) Se wæs mæ¯res lı
¯
fes man
‘he was a man of famous life’
and the partitive genitive, as in
a¯n heora ‘one of them’. It is possible,
although not necessarily fruitful, to further subdivide the categories
above, but that can make it difficult to see the general principles behind
the use of the genitive.
This is especially important here, because, in addition to the above
uses which closely resemble those in present-day English, there are a
few types of genitive which no longer exist or do so only in an altered
form. One such example is the genitive of measure, as in
f ı¯f nihta first
‘a five nights’ period’, where present-day constructions usually prefer an
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