Misplaced apostrophes
Apostrophes aren’t difficult to use once you know how, but putting them in the wrong place is one of the most common grammar mistakes in the English language. Many people use an apostrophe to form the plural of a word, particularly if the word in question ends in a vowel, which might make the word look strange with an S added to make it plural.
The rules:
- Apostrophes indicate possession – something belonging to something or someone else.
- To indicate something belonging to one person, the apostrophe goes before the ‘s’. For instance, “The girl’s horse.”
- To indicate something belonging to more than one person, put the apostrophe after the ‘s’. For example, “The girls’ horse.”
- Apostrophes are also used to indicate a contracted word. For example, “don’t” uses an apostrophe to indicate that the word is missing the “o” from “do not”.
- Apostrophes are never used to make a word plural, even when a word is in number form, as in a date.
How not to do it:
- The horse’s are in the field
- Pen’s for sale
- In the 1980’s
- Janes horse is over there
- The girls dresses are ready for them to collect
How to do it properly:
- The horses are in the field
- Pens for sale
- In the 1980s
- We didn’t want to do it
- Jane’s horse is over there
- The girls’ dresses are ready for them to collect
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