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Anonymous Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

Problem with apostrophes

Hi

I have a doubt with the slogan "enjoy a Royal Flush stay", might it be "enjoy a Royal Flush's stay"?

Thanks for your help!

Paula
  

Top answer

You do not need the apostrophe here. Presumably "Royal Flush" is either the name of a company or referring to a hand in poker; in both cases it is being used adjectively. It is also presumably meant to sy that you will have an extremely expensive and luxurious stay.

  • You do not need the apostrophe here.
  • Presumably "Royal Flush" is either the name of a company or referring to a hand in poker; in both cases it is being used adjectively.
  • It is also presumably meant to sy that you will have an extremely expensive and luxurious stay.
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1 Answers
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You do not need the apostrophe here. Presumably "Royal Flush" is either the name of a company or referring to a hand in poker; in both cases it is being used adjectively. It is also presumably meant to sy that you will have an extremely expensive and luxurious stay.

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