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Oh. Context always helps us give better answers. Evesplace.com would be a reasonable name for a website for women. (It should really be "Eve's place," but I don't suppose you can have an apostrophe in a web address.)
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I'd like to point out that this "sentence" is lacking a main verb.
How is confidientialiy handled... How does the confidentialiy issue get handled...
There are a number of choices, but right now, it's just left hanging
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No, no apostrophe in the 1600s . The apostrophe is a possessive marker, not a plural marker. It is grudgingly approved only in a very limited number of cases which would otherwise look confusing, as in this: mind your p's and q's .
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One more: I'd say "the Ohio country" would be okay in describing the events of the 1600's, before legal boundaries were considered. Also, note the apostrophe in "1600's," which I believe is the correct form.
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Hi,
'Its' is a pronoun where as 'it's' is a contraction of 'it is'.
The first line is correct.
The defence is just doing its job.
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Type is too tiny...I see I missed the opening "I's." However, my grammar books accept the apostrophe after numbers made plural. Without is also correct, but with is perfectly fine.
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if you count by two's, you miss it by one. if you count by five's, you miss it by
the same amount. It is greater than 20. What is the smallest number it
could be? Pretty good, but you still missed a couple of capital letters. And the
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Hi,
Yes, you need the apostrophe.
Or you could say 'the work of the Orkney artists'.
Clive
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Hello JJ,
Always the latter.
All the best,
MrP
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Do you write:
My mother’s- in- law Southern hospitality or
My mother- in- law's Southern hospitality?
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