Exactly!
The balance between breaking the rules and maintaining comprehension in the use of language is at its best the art of a great orator or writer. It is also an everyday occurrence. Individuals are inseparable from the whole. The way in which we all use language differently contributes to the perpetual evolution of languages everyday. Apostrophes or not.
Exactly!
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
Has anyone noticed I have ceased to use apostrophes in my posts here? Has their absence caused any problems? Thats how language evolves.
Right on bee, I had to read that 3 times before it made any sense. Never had to previously.
Maybe I'm a bit t'ick this morning?
Re Jame's post #64 above. I agree. Time's up & time to move on.
As our erstwhile PM said....."A fair suck of the sauce bottle".![]()
Jame's or James'?
No it don't, Jim.Bloody hell, please don't start another discussion/altercation/thread, about who was it that moved the bloody thing to the right ffs..
Well I'll be screwed! Purely coincidental that the article used your Mother's favoured name for you BTW.
My apologies old boy, seems you are correct as both can be used. I didn't know it was your birthday. Many Happs.
Explanation: Singular words ending in 's' can either end in an apostrophe or 's' to show possession. Example: It is James's birthday or it is James' birthday. Commentary: both James' birthday and James's birthday are grammatically correct.
Last edited by 4bee; 1st November 2018 at 02:33 PM. Reason: My incorrect opinion.
Another example of stupid English grammar is the rule that requires 'an' when the next word starts with a vowel sound (a,e,i,o,u). Seriously, whats wrong with 'a egg?' Does it matter if people don't say, 'an egg?' No, it doesn't. This rule drives foreign language learners of English crazy because it serves no useful purpose (just like apostrophes).
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