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Apostrophes

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贰-尘补颈濒:听writingcenter@umgc.edu

Read tips on when and how to use apostrophes.

Use an apostrophe to show that a noun is possessive. Possessive nouns are nouns that show ownership. For example, you would refer to "Bob鈥檚 hat" or "Sue鈥檚 desk," with the hat belonging to Bob and the desk belonging to Sue. Sometimes, however, the ownership is implied and a little harder to see, such as a day鈥檚 work (with the work belonging to the day) or the table鈥檚 legs (the legs belonging to the table). When you are unsure, try turning it into a phrase.

Table鈥檚 legs = the legs of the table
A day鈥檚 work = the work of a day

To show possession for a singular noun: Add an apostrophe [鈥榏 and s.

When to add 鈥撯榮:聽If a noun does not end in 鈥搒, add 鈥撯榮.

Susan pruned the tree鈥檚 branches last week. Thank you for finding the children鈥檚 bikes.

When to add only an apostrophe:聽If the noun is plural and already ends in 鈥搒, add just an apostrophe.

Both students鈥 papers were well-written. Both cars鈥 tires were flat.听

How to show joint possession:聽To show that two or more nouns both have possession of the same thing, use 鈥撯榮 or 鈥搒' with the last noun only.

Have you seen Trisha and Greg鈥檚 new car, yet?

Mary and James鈥 tickets came in the mail today.

How to show individual possession: To show two different people each owning something separately, make all nouns possessive.

Mary鈥檚 and Michael鈥檚 grades have been posted.

Use an apostrophe and 鈥搒 to show that an indefinite pronoun is possessive.听

Someone鈥檚 book has fallen into the snow.

Use an apostrophe to show omissions in contractions and numbers.听In contractions, apostrophes take the place of the missing letters. For example, "it鈥檚" stands for "it is," and "can鈥檛" stands for "can not."

It鈥檚 terrible that James can鈥檛 find his textbooks he lost last week.

Note that "it鈥檚," with an apostrophe, is not possessive鈥"it鈥檚" stands for "it is." When you want the possessive pronoun, you want to use "its," with no apostrophe. If you are unsure whether you want to use "it鈥檚" or "its," say it as "it is." If it does not make sense as "it is," then you want the possessive pronoun "its."

In addition, an apostrophe can be used to show the omission of the first two digits of a year. For example, 鈥95 stands for 1995.

A similar situation happened in 鈥95.

Note that when discussing something that happened during a particular time period, such as 鈥渄uring the 1990s,鈥 no apostrophe is needed.

An apostrophe is no longer used in plural numbers, plural letters, plural abbreviations, and words mentioned in a sentence as words. Here are the correct forms to follow:

She skated several figure 8s in a row. Two large Ms were painted on both doors. He collected two IOUs today. I must have told him twenty nos today!

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