Помянем овощей с возвышенной местности поименно:
Advanced English Grammar: A Linguistic Approach
By Ilse Depraetere, Chad Langford
Сравним с мнениями прочих фруктов (итог в конце крупным шрифтом):
[Huddleston, Pullum]
_The Cambridge Grammar Of The English Language
Та самая ссылка из монументального исследования в OP.
См. пристально Measure Genitives.
=== === ===
[Eastwood]
_Oxford Guide To English Grammar
5 The pattern yesterday's newspaper
The possessive can express time when.
Have you seen yesterday's newspaper?
Next month's figures are expected to show an improvement.
It can also express length of time.
We've booked a three weeks' holiday.
There's going to be about an hour's delay.
NOTE
a. Sunday's newspaper is a newspaper on one specific Sunday, e.g. last Sunday.
A Sunday newspaper is a type of newspaper, one that appears on Sundays.
b. We can also use the following patterns to express length of time.
a holiday of three weeks - a three-week holiday
a delay of one hour - a one-hour delay
Стоит отметить, что Grammarly предлагает удалить пререкаемый артикль.
=== === ===
[Greenbaum]
_The Oxford English Grammar
The genitive and of-phrase can have several other meanings. The temporal genitive denotes a period of time or a duration of time:
a session's legislation ('legislation passed during a session')
today's lower standards ('the lower standards that apply today')
this season's games ('the games during this season')
...
The descriptive genitive differs grammatically from the other uses of the genitive. It is a modifier. The determiner that precedes a descriptive genitive applies to the whole noun phrase and not to the genitive. For example, girls' is a descriptive genitive in a girls' school ('a school for girls') and its function is equivalent to that of local in a local school. A modifier that precedes the descriptive genitive may belong either to the genitive or to the head of the noun phrase. A good girls' school is ambiguous between 'a school for good girls' and its more plausible interpretation 'a good school for girls'.
Here are some examples of descriptive genitives:
cow's milk ('milk produced by cows')
a warm summer's day ('a warm day in summer')
a ten minutes' walk ('a walk lasting ten minutes')
the lion's share of the booty ('the largest share')
Descriptive genitives may form part of an idiomatic phrase, as in lion's share above and in dowager's hump and dog's dinner below:
[7] [. . .] the typical bent spine of osteoporosis has been given the name of 'dowager's hump'. [W2B-022-12]
[8] Well the thing I'm worried about more than anything is having to go into his office dressed up like a dog's dinner [SIA-042-165]
Some descriptive genitives can be replaced by nouns that are not in the genitive: a warm summer day, a ten minute walk. Nouns are regularly used to
premodify other nouns, as in this noun phrase: a plastic cat litter scoop.
Generally, the singular form of the noun is used in premodification.
Стоит отметить, что Grammarly предагает добавить дефис в
a ten minute walk.
=== === ===
И наконец,
у Randolph Quirk, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech, Jan Svartvik
A COMPREHENSIVE GRAMMAR OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE про это:
A hyphen before the singular form is normal in expressions denoting age, time, weight, size, etc of the following type:
a girl (who is) ten years old ~ a ten-year-old girl
a pause lasting three seconds ~ a three-second pause
inflation amounting to two digits ~ two-digit inflation
an agreement between four powers ~ a four-power agreement
a bill worth ten dollars ~ a ten-dollar bill
However, in quantitative expressions of the following type there is possible variation (cf 5.118 Note [-b-]):
a ten day absence [singular]
a ten-day absence [hyphen + singular]
a ten days absence [plural]
a ten days' absence [genitive plural]
5.118 Note [-b-]
[-b-] With temporal nouns in the plural, the apostrophe is sometimes omitted (cf 17.108):
several {weeks'/weeks} vacation
Жаль, что замечание крупным шрифтом в Квёрке попалось последним, совершенно на ощупь...
Короче, как ни напишешь, всё ок.))
Бег на месте обще-прими-ря-ю-щий...