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Hi Plural forms in English are nearly always written without an apostrophe. However, if you meant a possesive form, you do have to use one. But this is not entirely clear from what you've written. So, almost never an apostrophe with plurals.
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Hi,
In the below line, EDS refers to a company name.
Could you clarify why letter S didn't follow apostrophe?
t’s important to note that before the acquisition and the global economic crisis, EDS’ performance levels were
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Hi,
Is it correct to use apostrophe with two names as mentioned in below sentence?
Please correct it if it is wrong.
I have resolved all the problems in Steve's & David's desktops.
Regards,
Ravi
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condone: to regard or treat (something bad or blameworthy) as acceptable, forgivable, or harmless.(m-w.com) style manual: a book that gives guidance in the preparation of manuscripts for publication, particularly with regard to punctuation,
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Hi InViVe: * I am almost certain that one is needed in a title of a chapter of a document i am writing, specifically: "Robotics platforms' overview". Am i right? I woould not use an apostrophe because it is not possessive (the
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Hello how about this ? is this correct "Paris's bag" (here she's paris hilton :) Best Regards
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Hi, aad, thanks for joining us. Welcome to English Forums. If he's bigger than you, better be careful! "No mention it" is not a sentence. It has no verb. "Do not mention it" is correct. "Don't mention it" is
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What am I thinking about? There are two u's in "vacuum"? two ues?
There is no absolute authority on grammar in English but it has long been customary to accept the apostrophe in plurals if the omission of the apostrophe would
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
275 days ago
Regards, Plurals, Abbreviations, Punctuation, Spelling, Apostrophes, Genitives, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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Hi, The first sounds like an unnatural translation. Our common fixed expression is "to take turns." "In a game of chess you take turns moving." " - - - take turns shooting at the King." But we do have fixed
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Hi, I need some divining guidance on apostrophes with regards to the following sentence: ...Corporal's Black and White both excelled at drill. ...Corporals' Black and White both excelled at drill. Which sentence is grammatically correct?
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