I’m currently working on revisions to my novel manuscript. I’ve been over the draft numerous times, so I’m not finding a lot of typos or grammar errors. My focus this time through, rather, is on style and continuity.
But I am spotting the occasional error, and I want to bring one of those to your attention.
I had written, “. . . hitting the road without him catching on.” In doing so, I had made an error that I frequently catch in the writing of others: failure to use the possessive noun or pronoun with a gerund. The sentence should read, “. . . hitting the road without his catching on.” In my defense, I think I was thrown by the preposition, which normally would take an objective pronoun, as in, ” . . . hitting the road without him.” But the real object of the preposition is “catching on,” so the modifier must be possessive.
I’m glad I caught the mistake. For a full discussion of the issue, check this out: Using the Possessive Case with Gerunds.
Hi Cliff –
The link “Using the Possessive Case with Gerunds” doesn’t work for me. I get a message saying the page doesn’t exist.
Hope all’s well –
Bruce
Thanks, Bruce! Sorry about that. It’s fixed now.
Unfortunately, this error appears so often that the correct form sometimes sounds odd.