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Re: the teacher's developing cognizance of the child's intellectual activity
I'm suffering from lack of the first part of the sentence. On first blush, one might take "teacher's" as a contraction instead of a possessive."Intellectual activity" means different things to different people. In a classroom of young children, it would probably mean...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
Avangi
16 days ago
Possessives
Contractions
Re: Mission control...
I assume that plant's is a contraction of plant is rather than the possessive. So, it means that the mission is centered at the plant. NASA's "mission control" is somewhere in Texas, I believe.
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
by
Philip
43 days ago
Possessives
Contractions
Re: You and Who's
Why don’t you have a medical check up regular appointment was set on that day to meet the beautician.Whose is possessive; who's is the contraction of "who is"
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
RayH
57 days ago
Possessives
Contractions
Re: Help with apostrophe's
Rule One: Don't ever use apostrophes when you are making a plural. Apostrophe's in your title is incorrect. Rule Two: Use apostrophes when you are making a possessive. Sometimes it goes before the s and sometimes after the s. You need to learn the rule and if you search this site...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
nona the brit
111 days ago
Plurals
Possessives
Contractions
Apostrophes
Re: Pizza's?
"Pizzas" is the plural: "We sell pizzas." "Pizza's" is a possessive: "The pizza's topping was delicious." "Pizza's" is also a contraction: "Pizza's my favorite food."
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
GrammarGuy
124 days ago
Plurals
Possessives
Contractions
Re: Plurals of abbreviations - 1990's or 1990s
I think the p's and q's argument is most salient here. The apostrophe is used for the sake of clarity. While conventionally used for the possessive, the apostrophe is also used to indicate vernacular omissions and contractions, such as in the cases of "Ol' Dirty ***" or...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
Anonymous
127 days ago
Plurals
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Please Check My Answers
1. The possessive of a plural noun ending in s is formed by adding: A. another s and an apostrophe. B. another s only. C. an apostrophe only. D. none of the above I think the answer is C. 2. Which of the following shows the correct possessive form of a plural noun? A. three dogs bowls B....
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
Blondie024
176 days ago
Verbs
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Re: Question about apostrophe usage with possesive pronouns
"the answer is that you can't. Can you think of an example where you might?" The only time you would write an apostrophe with a possessive pronoun would be to indicate the contraction 's for is: That's not my jacket. Mine's over there. JJM
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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Anonymous
190 days ago
Possessives
Nouns
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Re: their?
"Their" is used as a possessive for "the user" (to avoid gender pronouns like his or hers). "they've": they is a pronoun for "the user" and is a contraction of "they have".
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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Vorpar
240 days ago
Possessives
Nouns
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Can I contract "David is doing..." to "David's doing..."
Hello, allQuestion:"David is doing his home work."Is it possible to use a contraction with David and is to make "David's doing his homework." I think in this case the contraction is either ungrammatical or at best unwise because David's is possessive.Am I right or wrong? Would you get involved in...
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
Anonymous
1 yr 35 days ago
Possessives
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