What's Happened to Good English??
-
- Posts: 3396
- Joined: Mon Nov 01, 2010 6:53 pm
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
I'm just a tad late on this one.
I must admit I'm pretty wayward with my use of Apostrophes; like most I can handle the simple ones like it's etc, but it's often guesswork after that.
Here's one for you. 'I sense their spirit's still dwell here' It's plural but does it need an apostrophe as used here?
Cheers Terry
I must admit I'm pretty wayward with my use of Apostrophes; like most I can handle the simple ones like it's etc, but it's often guesswork after that.
Here's one for you. 'I sense their spirit's still dwell here' It's plural but does it need an apostrophe as used here?
Cheers Terry
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
No.
Spirit - singular.
Spirits - plural.
spirit's - possessive eg spirit's voice
spirits' voices - more than one spirit
Apostrophes aren't that hard really once you learn a couple of rules.
Spirit - singular.
Spirits - plural.
spirit's - possessive eg spirit's voice
spirits' voices - more than one spirit
Apostrophes aren't that hard really once you learn a couple of rules.
- David Campbell
- Posts: 1232
- Joined: Sun Nov 28, 2010 10:27 am
- Location: Melbourne
- Contact:
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
If in doubt, ask yourself a question, Terry...is there any possession involved? If there is, you'll need an apostrophe, and the only question is where to put it.
Heather gives one example, and here's another: "The cats paws scampered across the pavement." Where's the possession? The paws either belong to one cat or more than one cat, so we're talking about "the paws of the cat" or "the paws of the cats". That tells you where the apostrophe goes. In the first case it's "cat's paws", in the second it's "cats' paws".
If there's no possession and it's just a plural, as with "paws", there's no apostrophe.
Cheers
David
Heather gives one example, and here's another: "The cats paws scampered across the pavement." Where's the possession? The paws either belong to one cat or more than one cat, so we're talking about "the paws of the cat" or "the paws of the cats". That tells you where the apostrophe goes. In the first case it's "cat's paws", in the second it's "cats' paws".
If there's no possession and it's just a plural, as with "paws", there's no apostrophe.
Cheers
David
-
- Posts: 3396
- Joined: Mon Nov 01, 2010 6:53 pm
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
Thanks David and Heather, that's the way I thought it was.
It's just that in this case here, the sentence refers to the spirits of many people.
The whole sentence by the way goes 'I sense their spirits still dwell here; I guess they always will.'
Terry
It's just that in this case here, the sentence refers to the spirits of many people.
The whole sentence by the way goes 'I sense their spirits still dwell here; I guess they always will.'
Terry
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
In this case Terry, the spirits are plural - hence the "s" on the end of the word spirit.
It's not spirit's (or spirits') because the spirit or spirits don't "own" anything.
It's not spirit's (or spirits') because the spirit or spirits don't "own" anything.
-
- Posts: 3396
- Joined: Mon Nov 01, 2010 6:53 pm
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
Thanks Heather
That's how I had it for the same reasons you point out here,
But wouldn't have bet too much on it being right.
If only I'd of paid more attention to Sister Etna - might have saved me getting the cuts so often as well?
Terry
That's how I had it for the same reasons you point out here,
But wouldn't have bet too much on it being right.
If only I'd of paid more attention to Sister Etna - might have saved me getting the cuts so often as well?
Terry
- keats
- Posts: 1045
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2010 11:43 pm
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
Thank's y'all.
Ne'il
Ne'il
-
- Posts: 6946
- Joined: Sun Oct 31, 2010 12:08 pm
- Location: Here
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
Yeah, be a confidence man, I've met a few of those. 

Neville
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
- Shelley Hansen
- Posts: 2269
- Joined: Sun May 04, 2014 5:39 pm
- Location: Maryborough, Queensland
- Contact:
Re: What's Happened to Good English??
Couldn't resist sharing this one from a Facebook Buy/Swap/Sell site:
High heals. ONLY WARN TWICE. Very comfortable.
Exactly as posted - including the upper case. Be warned!!
High heals. ONLY WARN TWICE. Very comfortable.
Exactly as posted - including the upper case. Be warned!!
Shelley Hansen
Lady of Lines
http://www.shelleyhansen.com
"Look fer yer profits in the 'earts o' friends,
fer 'atin' never paid no dividends."
(CJ Dennis "The Mooch o' Life")
Lady of Lines
http://www.shelleyhansen.com
"Look fer yer profits in the 'earts o' friends,
fer 'atin' never paid no dividends."
(CJ Dennis "The Mooch o' Life")