g. witness' story . That's a new one on me!
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MatressAccording to some sources, like the Oxford Companion to the English Language, the apostrophe used to mark the plural with acronyms (VIP's), decades (1970's), and family names (the Jones's) is standard.
- Plurals of multi-letter combinations and plurals of numerals end in s with no apostrophe, e.g. VIPs, 1000s.
AlienvoordAccording to some sources, like the Oxford Companion to the English Language, the apostrophe used to mark the plural with acronyms (VIP's), decades (1970's), and family names (the Jones's) is standard.Hi Alienvoord
AlienvoordYou don't have to agree, but the fact is that these are standard uses.If a noun ends in s, the standard plural ending is es. It makes no difference whether the noun is a common noun or a proper noun:
Grammar GeekIt's highly nonstandard in my experience. Granted, different countries have different styles.It is a standard variant, according to the Oxford Companion to the English Language. You'll ha
You say that "The Davis's are all coming to dinner" is the correct way to write something that says that the entire Davis family is coming?