Tìm Giáo viên Tiếng Anh
Profe José
Giáo viên chuyên nghiệp
What's your view on the possessive form in English?

It's been quite the debate if the apostrophe sign (') goes at the end of a word that ends in (S) or do we just add on another (S)?  Could this be a British vs. American thing? or is this a new established rule?  

 

examples; James' car vs. James's car

                Chris' job vs. Chris's job

23 Thg 05 2014 22:20
Bình luận · 6
1

At university I was taught that we add an additional s for contemporary people, but not for historical figures.  ie. Mr Jones's but Jesus'.     I have no idea what the rationale for this rule was/is but that's what we were taught.     In everyday writing I think I tend to go back and forth interchangeably without thinking about it.  When I was teaching I taught/accepted both. 

27 tháng 5 năm 2014
1

I'm not aware of a difference between US and GB English in this area.

 

Personally, I go with the sound of the word.  In most cases you hear an extra 's' and add an extra syllable /iz/, so I add apostrophe + s, for example Chris's /krisiz/.

 

The only times when I wouldn't add an extra 's' after the apostrophe is when the possessive form doesn't add the  extra syllable /iz/.  This is usually the case with silent s sounds eg the name Louis. I wouldn't add an extra s here - I'd just write "  Louis'  " .

 

 

26 tháng 5 năm 2014
1

As a Chinese, I get the rules from our book. If the ends with an S, just need a '

26 tháng 5 năm 2014
1

I totally agree, but new grammar books are showing differently!

26 tháng 5 năm 2014
1

I was always taught if it ends with an "s" than the apostrophe goes at the end. No extra "s" is added. I am American and was taught years ago. 

23 tháng 5 năm 2014
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