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Anonymous Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Words Ending in S possessive Forms

I was curious as to where people stand on the possessive form of words ending in s.

Some writers will say that the -s after Charles' is not necessary and that adding only the apostrophe (Charles' car) will suffice to show possession. Furthermore, the NYPL Guide also suggests that when a word ends in a double s, we're better off writing its possessive with only an apostrophe: the boss' memo, the witness' statement.

However, many writers insist, however, that we actually hear an "es" sound attached to the possessive forms of these words, so an apostrophe -s is appropriate: boss's memo, witness's statement. If the look of the three s's in a row doesn't bother you, use that construction.

What is your preference? and why?
  

Top answer

` Like most BE speakers and writers I prefer Charles's car , the boss's memo , Jesus's crucifixion etc. Why? That's the way I speak those phrases, so that's the way I write them.

  • ` Like most BE speakers and writers I prefer Charles's car , the boss's memo , Jesus's crucifixion etc.
  • Why?
  • That's the way I speak those phrases, so that's the way I write them.
  • See also the Related forum topics below.
  • Rover
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1 Answers
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`
Like most BE speakers and writers I prefer Charles's car, the boss's memo, Jesus's crucifixion etc.

Why? That's the way I speak those phrases, so that's the way I write them.

See also the Related forum topics below.

Rover

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