Mad Doug Biker
Banned from every bar in the Galaxy
- Location
- Craggy Island
Surely the apostrophe indicates possession, i.e. it is her baby?
Yes, it does, but according to traditional English grammar, the final 's' should be left out, i.e. "Bridget Jones' baby". Just another one of those rules which no doubt makes learning English for non-English speakers a real pain.Surely the apostrophe indicates possession, i.e. it is her baby?
Yes, it does, but according to traditional English grammar, the final 's' should be left out, i.e. "Bridget Jones' baby". Just another one of those rules which no doubt makes learning English for non-English speakers a real pain.
I think I'd be a lot happier if I never noticed missing, redundant or misplaced apostrophes, because there are far too many of them around to cause me aggravation. Ignorance is bliss.
Probably easier for foreigners who learn all these rules as new, than for most native speakers who have to unlearn part of their natural usage when learning the conventions of formal written English. In most varieties of English, people will say ' Jones's ' (pronounced Jonesis) rather than ' Jones' ' in a case like this.Yes, it does, but according to traditional English grammar, the final 's' should be left out, i.e. "Bridget Jones' baby". Just another one of those rules which no doubt makes learning English for non-English speakers a real pain.
Yes, it does, but according to traditional English grammar, the final 's' should be left out, i.e. "Bridget Jones' baby". Just another one of those rules which no doubt makes learning English for non-English speakers a real pain.
Dos & don'ts?
'Strictly' correct, certainly, but people almost always use:
Do's & don'ts
...and with good reason. Nothing missing, no possession...it just reads more easily. That works for me.
Surely the apostrophe indicates possession, i.e. it is her baby?
Yes, it does, but according to traditional English grammar, the final 's' should be left out, i.e. "Bridget Jones' baby". Just another one of those rules which no doubt makes learning English for non-English speakers a real pain.
No. The all-but-definitive Economist Style Guide says:Is this poster wrong?
![]()
Shaun
Do I win?Spot the difference
"I helped my Uncle Jack off his horse"
"I helped my Unlce jack off his horse"
I though pluralised words did merit an apostrophe (for some reason).
...