The Apostrophe
The apostrophe is a punctuation
mark. It serves primarily two functions:
to indicate possession and to form
contractions.
- Possession:
One
of the primary roles of the apostrophe is to indicate possession or ownership.
·
For singular nouns,
the apostrophe is followed by an "s" to denote possession, as in
"the cat's tail."
·
For plural nouns ending
in "s," the apostrophe is placed after the "s," as in
"the students' notebooks."
·
For plural nouns not ending in
"s," the apostrophe is followed by an
"s," similar to singular possessive nouns, as in "the children's
toys."
Examples:
- The dog's collar
- The children's playground
- Sarah's book
- The company's logo
- My friend's advice
- The birds' nests
- The student's desk
- The teachers' lounge
- The cat's food
- The employees' uniforms
- Contractions:
Apostrophes
are also used in contractions, where two words are combined into one, with
letters omitted and replaced by an apostrophe.
For
example,
i.
"can not" becomes
"can't,"
ii.
"do not" becomes "don't,"
iii.
"it is" becomes "it's."
iv.
"I will" becomes "I'll."
v.
"I am" becomes "I'm."
vi.
"They have" becomes
"They've."
vii.
"We are" becomes "We're."
viii.
"He would" becomes
"He'd."
ix.
"She will" becomes
"She'll."
x. "You have" becomes "You've."
3. Compound Possessives:
When two or more nouns
possess something jointly, the apostrophe is placed only after the last noun.
"Raju and Neeta’s
house" indicates a house belonging to both John and Mary.
For example:
- Rohan and Priya's apartment
- Raj and Simran's wedding
- Vikram and Meera's vacation
- Arjun and Ayesha's home
- Sanjay and Pooja's anniversary
- Rahul and Anjali's party
- Amit and Neha's pet
- Deepak and Rani's kitchen
- Siddharth and Maya's garden
- Aakash and Nisha's project
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