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I have always thought of developing and changing many aspects of our educational system.

I have always thought of developing and changing many of our educational system aspects.

These are two sentences I wrote and I have found (in web) that "aspect of" is always used. Why it is not fine to write as the second sentence not the first? What rule I miss here?

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  • Extra notes: "I have found (in web)" => "I have found (on the web)"..."What rule I miss here?" => "What rule did I miss here?" Commented Feb 25, 2016 at 10:25

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"I have always thought of developing and changing many of our educational system aspects".

This is almost legal, but should be "many of our educational system's aspects".

I have found (in web) that "aspect of" is always used. What rule I miss here?

Once you have the possessive "system'S", then "many of our educational system's aspects" is just more complicated. It is better to have "many" closer to what there are "many" of ("many aspects", not "many educational systems"). It is extra work for readers to understand if you move it further away, legal or not.

Also, if people hear it one way and if they've never heard the other, they're likely to repeat it the way they heard.

I thought one factor might be wanting to avoid all the S-es in "SyStem'S aSpectS". Though if you ask Google for "system's aspects" you will find it in other phrases--just not "educational system's aspects".

(Until this post of course, maybe you'll start a trend. :-P)

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many of our educational system aspects

Why would many aspects of our educational system be preferred?

Primarily because you're turning the noun-phrase "educational system" into an adjectival modifier, so that in effect you're "casting" noun-phrase {adjective-noun} into an adjective:

     ( (educational system) as adjective)  aspects

That may be easier for the non-native speaker who is unsure of which preposition to use in a prepositional phrase, but the following is more idiomatic:

many aspects { of our educational system }

just as "facets of the diamond" would be better than "diamond facets".

The facets are not "diamond".

The aspects are not "educational system".

Why is it better? Because the noun-as-adjective is not the clearest and simplest way to represent the idea of "belonging to" or "pertaining to". The best way to represent that idea is to use a possessive form.

the diamond's facets

the facets of the diamond

the system's aspects

aspects of the system

When choosing between the two forms of the possessive ( system's or of the system) a rule of thumb is to use "of the {noun}" with abstract nouns and the genitive possessive with concrete (and personal) nouns. System is an abstraction, so aspects of the system is a shade better than the system's aspects. Diamond is concrete, so the diamond's facets is a shade better than facets of the diamond (if you have a particular diamond in mind and are not speaking of diamonds generically).

In that last recommendation, we are moving away from strict notions of what is grammatical to a more nuanced sense of what is euphonious. There is not much difference between these two versions,but I think the second version is the better one.

The software's worst feature is its ribbon interface.

The worst feature of the software is its ribbon interface.

The worst trait of Tom is his stubbornness.

Tom's worst trait is his stubbornness.

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