English

Practical English Grammar


The possessive case


The possessive case of a noun or pronoun indicates ownership or possession.
Pronouns such as his, her, its, my, mine, your, yours, their, theirs, our, and
ours are all possessive case words.

Here are several rules for the possessive case.

A. Most singular nouns form their possessive by adding an apostrophe
and an s. (the baboon’s food; the girl’s sweater; Marx’s teachings; Burns’s
poetic lines; Dickens’s characters)

B. To form the possessive of a singular noun that ends with an s sound,
take one of two actions.

   1. If a name of two or more syllables ends in an eez sound, the possessive
is formed without an additional s. (Ulysses’ friends; Archimedes’
theories)

   2. Add an apostrophe and an s if the word would not be difficult to
pronounce. (dress’s cost; quartz’s essence)
C. Add only an apostrophe to form the possessive of a plural noun that
ends in s. (the boys’ gymnasium; the Murphys’ home)
D. If a plural noun does not end in s, add an apostrophe and an s. (the
men’s department; the mice’s hiding spots)

E. Use the possessive form for only the last name in compound nouns for
organizations, literary titles, businesses, and relatives. If owned separately,
use the possessive for both names.

Tom’s and Pete’s reputations (separate reputations)
Procter and Gamble’s sales (combined ownership)
mother-in-law’s magazines (one woman’s ownership)
mothers-in-law’s magazines (two or more women’s ownership)

F. For acronyms (words formed from the first letters of a series of words),
add an apostrophe and an s.

the NHL’s (National Hockey League’s) members
AARP’s (American Association of Retired People’s) membership


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Notes


Practical English Grammar - Notes
1. Italics Hyphens and Brackets
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2. Quotation Marks Part Three
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3. compound subjects part two
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4. Second Capitalization List
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5. Confusing usage words part six
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6. Sound a like words Part Four
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7. Regular Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs
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8. the noun
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9. complete and simple subjects
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10. the adverb
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11. the object of the preposition
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12. Confusing usage words part three
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13. More Apostrophe Situations
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14. the indirect object
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15. irregular verbs part two
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16. Irregular Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs
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17. agreement involving prepositional phrases
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18. the prepositional phrase
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19. the noun clause
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20. The possessive case
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21. Confusing usage words part two
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22. Quotation Marks Part Two
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23. the adjective phrase
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24. complex sentences
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25. the verb
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26. agreement between indefinite pronouns and their antecedents
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27. subject verb agreement situations
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28. the preposition
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29. the subordinating conjunction
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30. complete and simple predicates
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31. The nominative case
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32. the adverb clause
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33. Confusing usage words part seven
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34. The Colon
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35. Using Capital Letters
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36. The possessive case
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37. types of sentences by purpose
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38. subject and verb agreement
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39. the direct object
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40. Confusing usage words part three
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41. Active and passive voices
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42. The verb be
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43. More subject verb agreement situations
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44. the correlative conjunction
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45. compound subject and compound predicate
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46. reflexive demonstrative and interrogative pronouns
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47. the adjective
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48. sentences fragments and run on sentences
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49. The possessive case and pronouns
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50. the gerund and gerund phrase
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