on 30-08-2014 11:29 AM
did anyone watch the QI episode where they discussed Apostrophes and their use??
I missed it but a friend tells me I have been using apostrophes wrongly.
as in "Bill's Car" - the car that belongs to Bill should be "Bills' car".
on 30-08-2014 11:45 AM
on 30-08-2014 11:55 AM
thanks katy, that's what I have thought since school but evidently, Steven Fry on QI says that's wrong. I watch the show usually and he seems to know all the answers, but in this case I think he's wrong - ie Steven's answer is wrong.
But he (Steven) insists that, although everyone thinks it is correct, spell checkers etc - they are all wrong.
unless, of course, the friend I spoke with (with whom I spoke) this morning has misinterpreted Steven's answer.
on 30-08-2014 12:15 PM
I'm sure it is Bill's car.
It would be different if the car belonged to your parents. If it belonged to one parent it would be your parent's car, but if it belonged to both parents it would be your parents' car.
on 30-08-2014 12:19 PM
I think the apostrophe should be deleted from the English grammar, it's so unnecessary. If I'd written
"its so unnecessary" we would still know the meaning.
on 30-08-2014 12:26 PM
If the ownership refers to more than one person then the apostrophe goes after the plural s. e.g' The Browns' house, the musicians' instruments. I fit refers to a single person and the s is added simply to denote ownership then the apostrophe goes between the word and the added s e.g. Mr Brown's house, the musician's instruments.
If the name of the person (or object) involved ends in an s we sometimes cheat a bit and stick the apostrophe after the s, e.g. James' book - but strictly speaking it should still be James's book
it's a throwback to Old English where the genetive case (denoting belonging) was formed by adding an es ending (inflection) to a noun, e.g. þæs cyninges scip (the king's ship) - cyning = king. In modern English we have dropped the e - hence the apostrophe.
on 30-08-2014 12:27 PM
on 30-08-2014 12:28 PM
Joono is right.
Stephen is never wrong when it comes the English language.
I think your friend has misinterpreted. It is Bill's car. It belongs to Bill.
on 30-08-2014 12:31 PM
She_el, thanks for that because I often wonder about the apostrophe when the persons name ends with an s. I think I will stick to James' book because James's book looks dumb.
on 30-08-2014 12:39 PM
Thanks, Stawka - that explains it far more entertainingly than I did.