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Possessive (‘s/s’)

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Possessives
An apostrophe is used in a possessive form, like Esther’s family or Janet’s cigarettes, and this is the use of the apostrophe which causes most of the trouble. The basic rule is simple enough: a possessive form is spelled with ‘s at the end. Hence:

Lisa’s essay
England’s navy
my brother’s girlfriend
Wittgenstein’s last book
children’s shoes
women’s clothing
the aircraft’s black box
somebody’s umbrella
a week’s work
my money’s worth

There are three types of exception.

  1. First, a plural noun which already ends in s takes only a following apostrophe:
  • the girls’ excitement
  • my parents’ wedding
  • both players’ injuries
  • the Klingons’ attack
  • the ladies’ room
  • two weeks’ work

This is reasonable. We don’t pronounce these words with two esses, and so we don’t write two esses: nobody says *the girls’s excitement. But note that plurals that don’t end in s take the ordinary form: see the cases of children and women above.

2. Second, a name ending in s takes only an apostrophe if the possessive form is not pronounced with an extra s. Hence:

  • Socrates’ philosophy
  • Saint Saens’ music
  • Ulysses’ companions
  • Aristophanes’ plays

Same reason: we don’t say *Ulysses’s companions, and so we don’t write the extra s.

3. The final class of exceptions is pronouns. Note the following:

  • He lost his book.
  • Which seats are ours?
  • The bull lowered its head.
  • Whose are these spectacles?

Note in particular the spelling of possessive its. This word never takes an apostrophe:

*The bull lowered it’s head.

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