Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Apostrophe Question
"John Smith's cat"
or "John Smiths cat"
Many Thanks!
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While we're on grammar, the use of the semicolon in the question was incorrect and there was no "?" despite it being a question. This latter error is not rare for the AB at all. In fact many users think statements are also questions! Sorry if I sound rude, but the question has already been aptly answered and I wanted to stick my 2d worth in anyway! :-p
PS - Where there is possession, but it is also plural, the apostrophe comes AFTER the s. So if two sisters have a cat: the sisters' cat.
With advancing age we all have irregular genitives from time to time, PP. Especially when there are two S's involved. Mr Jones' house/Mr Jones's house? Conscience' sake/conscience's sake? I suspect how you write them depends on how you pronounce them when you're speaking.
TCL, just remembered a personal possessive pronoun with an apostrophe: one's.
Ah, this unpredictable language of ours.
While we're about it, how many people are irritated by the incorrect use of 'one'?I hear it constantly used as a synonym for 'me', whereas I was taught that it's an extended form of 'you', or 'the world in general'. I suspect that royalty have much to answer for in this! That or comedians' impersonations of them.