10-25-2004, 09:19 PM
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#259 (permalink)
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All Star Starter
Join Date: Jun 2003
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Quote:
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Originally Posted by clutch
You should know that most words that end in an unpronounced "s" form their possessive by adding an apostrophe + s. So we would write about "Illinois's next governor" and "Arkansas's former governor" and "the Marine Corps's policy." However, many non-English words that end with a silent "s" or "x" will form their possessives with only an apostrophe. So we would write "Alexander Dumas' first novel" and "this bordeaux' bouquet." According to the New York Public Library's Guide to Style and Usage, there are "certain expressions that end in s or the s sound that traditionally require an apostrophe only: for appearance' sake, for conscience' sake, for goodness' sake"
Did I make an impression?
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Yes, unfortunately...
:-)
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