ChatterBank3 mins ago
where does the apostrophe go????
51 Answers
I'm just designing a brochure for 'the assembly of the children moving onto primary school.'
So, is it
1, Leaver's Assembly?
2, Leavers' Assembly?
So, is it
1, Leaver's Assembly?
2, Leavers' Assembly?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The assembly is for more the leavers rather than for one leaver so that leads to Leavers' Assembly. (I know there is a different view in some cases- eg Patient's Charter/Passenger's Charter but there is a specific reason in those cases because the writers wanted to imply a personal contract.)
Some may argue that no apostrophe is needed at all because the leavers don't possess the assembly - the assembly is for them
Some may argue that no apostrophe is needed at all because the leavers don't possess the assembly - the assembly is for them
I'm clear on all the rules apart from the accepted (but not to me) practice of placing an apostrophe after the S for a name that ends in S- eg Mr Jones' car (why not Mr Jones's car), Achilles' heel, and of course Pythagoras' theorem (why not Pythagoras's theorem?)
And I've always wondered where the apostrophe goes on possessives of plurals that end in X- eg gateaux
And I've always wondered where the apostrophe goes on possessives of plurals that end in X- eg gateaux