He walked about in a rich man's clothes.

navi tasan

Key Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2002
Member Type
Academic
Native Language
Persian
Home Country
Iran
Current Location
United States
1) He walked about in rich man's clothes.
2) He walked about in rich-man clothes.
3) He walked about in a rich man's clothes.

I wrote the sentences.

I am trying to figure out how the 'rich man' could be turned into an adjective. I think in #3 we are simply saying that he was walking about wearing a specific rich man's clothes. We are not talking about the type of clothes he was wearing. It seems to me that in #2 'rich-man' does indeed work as an adjective. One could probably use 'rich man' in quotation marks as well. How about #1. To me it does not really sound correct and I can't parse it. But maybe that is one way of turning 'rich man' into an adjective?

Am I correct about #2 and #3? How about #1?

Any feedback will be greatly appreciated.
 
1) He walked about in rich man's clothes.
2) He walked about in rich-man clothes.
3) He walked about in a rich man's clothes.

I am trying to figure out how the 'rich man' could be turned into an adjective.
Both (1) and (2) work with adjectival meaning, but (1) sounds more natural to me. It's a descriptive-possessive construction; the reason there's no indefinite article before rich man's is that it's not referring to a particular rich man and clothes, being plural, cannot be used with the indefinite article. I do think the construction in (2) is natural in some cases:

He walked around in surfer clothes.

I agree with you about (3); it's referring to a particular rich man. However, if the head noun were singular (e.g., coat), there would be ambiguity. Thus, in the sentence He walked around in a rich man's coat, we can't tell whether to parse a rich man's coat as [a rich man]'s coat (the coat of a particular rich man) or as a [rich man's coat] (descriptive possessive).
 
Thank you so very much for this detailed response.

One more question here:

3) He bought rich men's clothes.

How would you interpret that?
 

Ask a Teacher

If you have a question about the English language and would like to ask one of our many English teachers and language experts, please click the button below to let us know:

(Requires Registration)
Back
Top