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All the talk on this forum about the proper use of apostrophe has me paranoid.

 

Please help me correct this.

"I am planning Isabelles curriculum"

 

I see the name underlined. The choices to correct it are Isabelle, Isabelle's, Isa belles, Isa-belles, and Isabelle s. I know I do not put an apostrophe before the s to show ownership but none of the other choices work either.

 

I decided the hive made me paranoid over this, the Hive can help me know what to do.:tongue_smilie:

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All the talk on this forum about the proper use of apostrophe has me paranoid.

 

Please help me correct this.

"I am planning Isabelles curriculum"

 

I see the name underlined. The choices to correct it are Isabelle, Isabelle's, Isa belles, Isa-belles, and Isabelle s. I know I do not put an apostrophe before the s to show ownership but none of the other choices work either.

 

I decided the hive made me paranoid over this, the Hive can help me know what to do.:tongue_smilie:

 

It is her curriculum. "I am planning Isabelle's curriculum." If you feel that is awkward, then you could always say, "I am planning curriculum for Isabelle."

 

ETA: Here are some links for help:

http://theoatmeal.com/comics/apostrophe

 

http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/apostrophe-1.aspx

 

http://apostrophehelp.com

 

A fun children's book:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Girls-Like-Spaghetti-Apostrophes/dp/0399247068

 

and a lesson plan for the above!

http://teachingwithpicturebooks.wordpress.com/category/the-girls-like-spaghetti/

Edited by Mrs Mungo
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It is her curriculum. "I am planning Isabelle's curriculum." If you feel that is awkward, then you could always say, "I am planning curriculum for Isabelle."

 

ETA: Here are some links for help:

http://theoatmeal.com/comics/apostrophe

 

http://grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/apostrophe-1.aspx

 

http://apostrophehelp.com

 

A fun children's book:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Girls-Like-Spaghetti-Apostrophes/dp/0399247068

 

and a lesson plan for the above!

http://teachingwithpicturebooks.wordpress.com/category/the-girls-like-spaghetti/

 

 

Ding, ding, ding...and the winner of the "Save the King's English Volunteer of the Year" award goes to (insert drum-roll please) Mrs. Mungo for her proper use of an apostrophe in a possesive noun used as an adjective!

 

:party::cheers2::patriot::hurray:

 

:D:D Faith

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All the talk on this forum about the proper use of apostrophe has me paranoid.

 

Please help me correct this.

"I am planning Isabelles curriculum"

 

I see the name underlined. The choices to correct it are Isabelle, Isabelle's, Isa belles, Isa-belles, and Isabelle s. I know I do not put an apostrophe before the s to show ownership but none of the other choices work either.

 

I decided the hive made me paranoid over this, the Hive can help me know what to do. :tongue_smilie:

 

Actually, in this case you DO put an apostrophe before the s to show ownership. Isabelle's curriculum, the curriculum that belongs to Isabelle. Maybe you're thinking of the confusion with its/it's?

Edited by kiwi3129
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I know I do not put an apostrophe before the s to show ownership but none of the other choices work either.

 

The problem is that "its" breaks the usual rule.

Use "its" for possessive (Its ball is red.) and "it's" for the contraction (It's a red ball.)

And yet Bob's ball is red.

See why we're all confused.

 

(I think.

Not a grammar person. Why can't it be more logical, like math? :tongue_smilie:)

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The problem is that "its" breaks the usual rule.

Use "its" for possessive (Its ball is red.) and "it's" for the contraction (It's a red ball.)

And yet Bob's ball is red.

See why we're all confused.

 

(I think.

Not a grammar person. Why can't it be more logical, like math? :tongue_smilie:)

 

LOL, I think grammar is far more logical than math. Don't even talk to me about imaginary numbers, LALALALALA!!!

 

That said, its does not break the rule, pronouns just fall under a *different* rule. His, hers, mine, yours, ours, its, none of them get apostrophes.

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That said, its does not break the rule, pronouns just fall under a *different* rule. His, hers, mine, yours, ours, its, none of them get apostrophes.

Yep, I finally heard that a few years ago, and I would have had SOOOO much less trouble remembering it through most of my life if I'd been taught it that way from the start instead of "It's is a contraction, its is possessive, remember that."

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Actually, in this case you DO put an apostrophe before the s to show ownership. Isabelle's curriculum, the curriculum that belongs to Isabelle. Maybe you're thinking of the confusion with its/it's?

 

LOL, I think grammar is far more logical than math. Don't even talk to me about imaginary numbers, LALALALALA!!!

 

That said, its does not break the rule, pronouns just fall under a *different* rule. His, hers, mine, yours, ours, its, none of them get apostrophes.

 

:iagree: I'm no expert, but I do know this.

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