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Andy0503 Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

A Basic Grammar question

Hello everybody. I am learning basic grammar from a book. and when I reached Apostrophes section. That book made confused me.
It said, anything ending with S will have S' and not ending with S will have 'S.
It had 2 examples.

1) Mel Brooks' original name was Melvin.
2) Keep your boss's boss off your boss's back.

these both examples are contradicting the writer's own rule.

Please can any one help me in explaining the exact rule and detailed rule with examples if possible.

Thanks
Andy
  

Top answer

That question was dealt with here: Basic noun question?

  • That question was dealt with here: Basic noun question?
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2 Answers
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That question was dealt with here:

Basic noun question?

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andy05031) Mel Brooks' original name was Melvin.
2) Keep your boss's boss off your boss's back.
Andy,
Think of this as a general rule. Apostrophe always suggests possessive context. Mel Brooks' original name was Melvin.- is correct because the "s" in Brooks is part of a name. So only an ap

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