![]() In this video, we are going to talk about word roots. June Casagrande is the author of “The Joy of Syntax: A Simple Guide to All the Grammar You Know You Should Know.” She can be reached at. But if you just remember the basic rule - add only an apostrophe to plurals that end in S, but add an apostrophe plus S to plurals that don’t - you’ll get men’s, women’s, children’s and even kids’ right every time. With all these confusing S rules, you can be forgiven if you stumble on plural possessives. When you’re making it possessive, the apostrophe goes before the S, “They shook each other’s hand,” because “other” is meant as singular. If you did, you’d write, incorrectly, “The dog wagged it’s tail” instead of the correct “The dog wagged its tail.” You’d also incorrectly write “Who’s car is parked outside?” when the possessive of “who” is not “who’s” but “whose”: Whose car is parked outside? “Each other” is easy to get wrong, too. For example, that rule that says you use an apostrophe and S to make a possessive out of a noun? Well, don’t try that with a pronoun. “It’s raining” means “It is raining,” with the letter S serving as an abbreviated form of “is.” But in “Who’s been sleeping in my bed,” the S stands for “has.” And in “Let’s eat,” the S represents the word “us,” which is hard to remember because no one says, “let us eat.” S also stands in for not one but several different words in contractions, where it adds an extra layer of confusion by pairing with an apostrophe. For the verb “let,” for instance, the third-person form is “lets”: he lets the cat out. S also forms possessives of nouns: the cat’s pajamas. To talk about more than one dog, you add S: dogs. But plural possessives get confusing because the letter S has too many jobs in English and they all get jumbled in our heads. If you want to make possessive a plural irregular noun that does not end in S, like children, add both an apostrophe and also an S: children’s clothes. To make a plural noun that ends in S possessive, add an apostrophe: kids’ clothes. So what’s the trick to writing plural possessives correctly? Just remember these basic rules and don’t get frazzled. ![]() Throw in some confusing expressions like “each other,” and almost everyone loses their grasp on how to use apostrophes: childrens’? childrens? childs’? They’re not sure. ![]() But nouns with irregular plurals, like “man,” “woman” and “child” trip them up. ![]() Many get it right: “the dogs’ tails,” with the plural S followed by the possessive apostrophe. But when they have to apply both those rules to the same word, they start to lose their grasp on them.įor regular nouns like “dog,” making the plural possessive isn’t tough. And they understand that when one dog joins another dog, you have two dogs, plural, not possessive. They understand that the tail of a dog is the dog’s tail, singular possessive. Most writers, in my experience, stumble on plural possessives - even writers who have no problem with singular possessives or plurals that aren’t possessive. Instead, it was the weirdest take on plural possessives I’ve ever seen. That’s when I knew that what I was witnessing was not a single accidental strike of an apostrophe key. I was editing a professional writer who’s been on the job for years, and I know from experience that writers make typos, but none - none of them - think that two apostrophes go in “men’s’ clothing.”īut then I saw “women’s’ clothing,” with two apostrophes. When I saw “men’s’ clothing” with two apostrophes, I figured it must be a typo. ![]()
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