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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

grammar

what is gramatically correct name the knight's horse or name the knights' horse?
  

Top answer

Hi, what is gramatically correct name the knight's horse or name the knights' horse? Both are a correct sentence, if you add a capital and a period or exclamation mark. Name the knight's horse!

  • Hi, what is gramatically correct name the knight's horse or name the knights' horse?
  • Both are a correct sentence, if you add a capital and a period or exclamation mark.
  • Name the knight's horse!
  • There is one knight and one horse.
  • Tell me the name of the horse.
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2 Answers
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Hi,

what is gramatically correct name the knight's horse or name the knights' horse?

Both are a correct sentence, if you add a capital and a period or exclamation mark.

Name the knight's horse! There is one knight and one horse. Tell me the name of the horse.
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I'm going to guess this is another chess question. Please type more carefully.

The piece itself is called either a knight or a horse, but there are times when you can't call it a horse. For instance, you can't have a queen's horse, it has to be "queen's knight", and it's "knight seven" (N7), never "horse seven". If you always call it a knight, you will be safe, and nobody will notice that

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