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James' or James's? Making Names that end in


James' or James's? Making Names that end in "S" Possessive

The apostrophe shows there is a letter missing ('Colin's' as in Colin, his things). My personal rule is to write that James has James's things ...

James' or James's: A Guide to Plural Possessives - wikiHow

When forming the possessive of singular proper names ending in 's', convention allows for either adding just an apostrophe or an apostrophe plus 's'. While some ...

James's or James' ? : r/grammar - Reddit

It's either or. The rule of thumb for singular nouns ending in 's' is to add the apostrophe. s is the word is one syllable, but just adding the apostrophe is ...

What is the correct way to make a possessive of a word ending in 's ...

The traditional rule is that you only use s' to make plural nouns possessive. Since the name James is not a plural noun, it shouldn't end with s' to make it ...

Plural name apostrophe position - English Stack Exchange

First of all, see my answer here regarding the correct way to make a possessive of a name ending in S. (Short version, both James' and James's ...

James' or James's | Creative Writing Forums

My understanding is that the apostrophe only goes on the end when referring to a possessive element of a company or business name that ends in S ...

A Word, Please: The trouble with singular nouns' punctuation

To form the possessive of a noun that ends in S, AP style has separate rules for proper names and generic nouns. For proper names like James, AP ...

The name "James" and grammar - The Well Trained Mind Forum

The correct way of adding possessive to a plural form that ends in s is to add the apostrophe only. So, assuming the last name is Smith and ...

James' mother or James's mother? | UsingEnglish.com ESL Forum

Pensby said: When using a possessive apostrophe for names that end in 's', e.g. James, should it be "James' mother" or " ...

Possessives and Attributives - The Chicago Manual of Style

How does one make the following names possessive (and all first names that end in “s”)? James, Iris. A. Chicago style adds an apostrophe and an s: James's, ...

Possessive apostrophe and names ending in "s".

I agree that nowadays it should be James's. I think MarmaladeQueen's grammar book is ambitious in trying to apply logic to English, but that is ...

Apostrophes With Names Ending in S - Grammarist

James can be James' or James's. Major style guides like APA Publication Manual, MLA, and Chicago recommend using apostrophes and extra letters S. This rule ...

Apostrophe with possessive names ending in 's. Both 'James' and ...

Apostrophe with possessive names ending in 's. Both 'James' and 'James's' are technically correct. · Comments42.

Mastering Possession: How to Choose Between James's ... - IASCE

When it comes to names, especially those ending in “s,” confusion often arises. Should it be James's or James'? In general, most style guides ...

Possessives : The Apostrophe - University of Sussex

This rule applies in most cases even with a name ending in s: Thomas's job: the bus's arrival: James's fiancée: Steve Davis's victory. There are three types of ...

Forming the possessive | EF United States

When pronouncing a possessive name, we add the sound /z/ to the end of the name. Examples. Thomas's book (or Thomas' book); James's shop (or James' shop); the ...

A few notes on plurals, commas and apostrophes. - Oxbridge Editing

Therefore, 'James's' and 'James” are both correct, but many people opt for the latter spelling. ... words ending in the letter 'Y'. You know that ...

Jameses, James's or James'? Which is Correct? - DoTEFL

Plural nouns are made possessive by adding an apostrophe onto the end of the word. A name of a person is a noun. Therefore, because James ends in S it would ...

EN: Charles'(s) car, James'(s) girlfriend, etc. - possessive of proper ...

- Use the normal possessive ending \'s after singular words or names that end in s (boss's, James's...) - Use the ending s\' on plurals that end ...

Grammar Experts, I need your help! - DC Urban Moms and Dads

I always though that a proper name ending in s becomes possessive with just the addition of an apostrophe. So "James' dog smells" rather than "James's dog ...