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204 lines
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204 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2596
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Title: HPR2596: Battling with English - part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2596/hpr2596.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 06:21:11
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---
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This is HPR Episode 2596 entitled Battling with English Part 2.
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It is hosted by Dave Morris and is about 21 minutes long and can in an explicit flag.
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The summary is misunderstanding about English grammar, spelling, punctuation, etc.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthaus.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HPR15, that's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthaus.com.
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Hello everybody, Dave Morris here for Hacker Public Radio.
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Today I've got a show in the series Battling with English and this is Part 2.
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I wanted to start by just commenting on the last episode where I talked about various
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confusions between words and things.
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I had a comment about the etymology of words and asking really if I would comment on the etymology
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when it seemed appropriate so I thought I'd just mention that in the context of the words
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then THEN and THEN. There's a confusion between these people use them wrongly in the wrong
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context interchangeably. I mentioned that there was a reference to their etymology but I didn't
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go into detail. So reading the online etymology diction on the page about the word THEN, THEN,
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I found the sentence that it was developed from the adverb THEN and not distinguished from it
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by spelling until 1700s. So it seemed that the two words are related and historically were the same.
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They've separated out over time and I think the mistakes that have been made
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differentiating between them have nothing to do with their origins. They're just mistakes because
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they do look quite similar. That out of the way, today's topic is about apostrophes. Now you're
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probably aware, hopefully you're aware that an apostrophe is a punctuation mark. It has three main
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uses. First of all it's used to indicate that letters have been omitted so you find words that
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are contracted. So for example the phrase they are can be contracted into there. So there,
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they're coming to dinner is the contraction of they are coming to dinner. Second usage is
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turning a word into a possessive form. So you would say something like the cat's paw. The paw
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is the cat's in that context refers to the paw which possesses the cat possesses the paw.
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Cat's paw means it's the paw owned by the cat. And the third usage is when the plural of a single
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letter or digit is required such as the expression dot your eyes and cross your T's. Eyes and
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T's in that sentence are written as I apostrophe S and T apostrophe S. Now there are other uses
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and it gets a bit complex actually but we're not going to we're going to try and steer away from
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the complexity today. There's a Wikipedia article I've referenced which has got a lot of detail in
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it. It's a bit dry so I'm not digging too deeply into it myself but you might find it useful to
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look at if you're interested in going further. And I'm thinking that since this is a complex topic
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I might well visit it again later in the series. See how we go if if if I get indications from
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listeners that they want me to do this and I'd certainly do it. So you'll find the term contraction
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in relation to apostrophes. I've already used it and it's that's a term that's used to describe
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the written form of a shortened word. So words originally start by people speaking them and then
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speaking them in a shortened way. And in linguistics the term used for this process of shortening
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elision and deletion which basically means the emission of one or more sounds and it's usually
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done to make words easier to pronounce. You will be aware that trying to pronounce words as they're
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written can sometimes be a bit tongue twisting and they tend to evolve into contracted forms.
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The reason I mentioned elision and deletion is because you might come across them in your in
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your journey through this subject and I was trying to describe them a little bit. So common
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examples are the word cannot which is sometimes written as one word sometimes is two and you can
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track that to can't see a n apostrophe t. I am becomes I'm you are becomes your or you're which is
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I like to pronounce the difference actually between that and the the the thing that prefers to
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possession but not everybody does. Is not comes isn't let us becomes let's that's let us two words
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comes less not the the salad vegetable it is becomes it's so the apostrophe in can't see a
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n apostrophe t shows that it's a contraction and not a word on its own. If you've been written
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without the apostrophe then that's an entirely different word and in fact can't is a word and it
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means hypocritical and sanctimonious talk. So you've got to be careful while you end up writing
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the wrong word if you just emit apostrophes. You can make similar arguments for other cases of
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contractions but not all of course. So I hope that particular bit is pretty clear. Let's talk
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about apostrophes in possessives which is an is an area of great misunderstanding I find. If you
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look at the linguistic arguments in the Wikipedia article that I've cited many times you'll see
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that there's more than just the possessive usage but we'll we'll just restrict ourselves to
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the possessive form at the moment and perhaps look at more detail at another time. So I thought
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it's worth first of all standing up by looking at plurals because plurals and possessives
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are confused quite a lot and plurals are often but not always formed by adding an s or an
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yes to the end of a word and when you do that you do not put an apostrophe in. So if you take the
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singular word cat make it plural cats you put an s on the end. Crocodile becomes crocodile
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an s has been put on the end programmer becomes programmers an s is on the end sandwich lunchtime
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so I thought of that one becomes sandwiches so there's an yes on the end volcano becomes volcanoes
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with an yes on the end. There are of course other plurals in English the plural of child is not
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child's but children. The plural of amoeba is not strictly amoeba's but amoeba, a-b-a-e at the end
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because the word has a Latin origin though there's an aside amoeba's is gaining acceptance though
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if I'd written that in a in a reply to an exam question that when I was learning biology
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I don't think it would have been accepted that's because it was a fair time ago I guess. Let's look
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at the possessive forms of words which the ones that are often confused with the plurals.
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There's a difference between cats c-a-t-s and cats c-a-t apostrophe s you could write
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I have two cats so that would be c-a-t-s because you have two feline friends that put it in the notes
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but you would not write I have two cats where you spell it c-a-t apostrophe s analyzing it
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that's an incomplete sentence you're saying that you have two things belonging to cats
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possessed by them because you use the possessive form but you haven't said what the things are so
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the sentence makes no sense the word cats here with an apostrophe is not the plural of cat you could
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write this is my cat's basket where you write c-a-t apostrophe s means the basket belonging to your cat
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so I put a few examples here and there's tons of them of course and I use some of the words that
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I used in the plurals example so the the base word cat the singular possessive cat c-a-t apostrophe
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s you might write this cat's fur is black crocodile possessive becomes crocodile with an apostrophe s
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a crocodile's teeth can regenerate many times programmer becomes programmers to be to make the
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possessive with a apostrophe s on the end you might write a programmer's life is a hard one so
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the apostrophe s relates to life which is possessed by the programmer sandwich you would write to
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get the possessive singular possessive sandwich apostrophe s that means something belonging to your
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sandwich you might write this is my sandwich is filling slightly on sentence but there you go
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you actually just to digress on that one for a second it's rare to write sentences like that
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native English speakers tend not to do that you wouldn't say that you would say looking at a
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jar of peanut butter or something you might say this is the filling for my sandwich you wouldn't say
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this is my sandwich is filling mostly you would not it's perfectly okay but it's just a rather
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awkward sentence i think it's quite a lot of reference to this type of writing and uh sure you
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could find out more about this is if this is something that is of interest to you and i'm aware
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that there's a a number of people on who listen to hbr who are not English speakers natively so
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these are these are issues that can cause a bit of a bit of a problem so that's all pretty
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simpler think you'll agree but what about when you're writing possessives relating to plurals
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what if you want to express the idea of possession by many things to write about a toy owned by
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several cats you'd write something like the cat catnip mouse makes a sound when moved but this time
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cat is c-a-t-s apostrophe so it's plural cats with a possessive apostrophe you might also write
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the boy's bedroom are down this way in this case the boys is talking about a number of boys and
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the bedrooms are plural and you would write b-o-y-s apostrophe if the plural is not formed by just adding
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an s then it gets a little more complex so you might refer to the word man where the plural is men
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and then you would write the sentence follow the signs to the men's changing room not the man's
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apostrophe but the men's m-e-n apostrophe s that's because men doesn't end with an s whereas boys
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does so this is something where it causes a lot of confusion and i think there's a really good
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explanation on the site called grammar monster and there's a reference that the page about
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using apostrophe there's a a diagrammatic box item on the on the page i've mentioned
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which talks about why it's like this what is the apostrophe replacing the apostrophe you put on the
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end of boys or cats what's it replacing well it's historical historically English added
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e-s to a noun to show possession so you might have written back then about the toy of a single dog
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and you would have written dog-es toys d-o-g-e-s toys you will see this if you look at really old
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writings the toys of a single dog plural again the toys of a single dog would have been a dog-es
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toys d-o-g-e-s t-o-y-s a toy of multiple dogs would have been the dog says toy so in that case dogs
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gets e-s on the end remember this is ancient an ancient way of doing it this is not me telling you
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the right way to do it i've written this out in the notes because i thought it would be helpful but
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you might be best to go and look at the grammar monster page where it's done in a a diagrammatic
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form and with cartoon dogs and stuff the next one is the mother of multiple children would have
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been the children-es mother i don't know how these were pronounced children-es maybe and maybe
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that was the right way so that would be children-es mother and the emblem of the country whales would
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have been whales as emblems be sometimes do say that still so over time the e in the e-s i'm
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mentioning before was replaced by an apostrophe and if that left the sequence s apostrophe s
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the end of a word the last s was removed so the toy of a single dog became a dogs toy
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d-o-g apostrophe s so the e has been dropped there the toys of a single dog became a dogs toys
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d-o-g apostrophe s again the toy of multiple dogs became the dogs apostrophe toy so the
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e-s has been taken off the end not the e-s been taken off the the e has been taken from the
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the end leaving s apostrophe s and then the s has been dropped the final s has been dropped
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okay got that the mother of multiple children became the children's mother so that was an apostrophe
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s the emblem of the country worlds became whales emblem so it was whales-es and then again the
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e-s was converted to apostrophe s but that made the word end in s apostrophe s so the last s was
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dropped now i find this explanation really i mean this is really true but it's a useful explanation i
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find and i sort of got the gist of this at some point in my lifetime of learning this this stuff
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but i could not have put it in such a nice way as this particular article does so i strongly
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recommend it so let's look at apostrophes with single letters and digits we already mentioned one
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in case and that's when you use a plural form of single letter or digit it's a bit confusing
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but it does actually make sense when you when you think about it and i've referred here to another
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site gramma girl we're strongly recommend she has podcast and those are really cool what she says
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i'm just quoting her directly here the apostrophe is especially important when you're writing about a's
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eyes and use that's a apostrophe s i apostrophe s and you apostrophe s because without the apostrophe
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readers could easily think you're writing the words as is and us so how would you differentiate
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between a series of a's and a series of eyes and a series of you without that apostrophe you might
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use emphasis or something like that but the apostrophe seems to be a generally better way of doing
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and that's why it's how it's evolved now here's a thing which catches people out all the time you
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might expect that the word it it when made possessive would become it's it apostrophe s but that's
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wrong in fact the word it apostrophe s it's is an abbreviation for it is so you only use the apostrophe
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to represent a missing letter so you might write it's very warm in Scotland at the moment actually
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today it's not but when i wrote this it was a very very hot it's is it apostrophe s and it means
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it is very warm you might also write it's been interesting researching this topic it apostrophe s
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that's short for it has it has been interesting researching this topic there's another sentence
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the horse stamped its feet shook its head and made in this case these are possessive its feet
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so there's no apostrophe otherwise it would be it is feet and it is head which makes no sense
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but if you ever end out about whether to use an apostrophe with its consider that with the apostrophe
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it means it is or it has check to see whether that makes sense in your sentence before you decide whether
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to use it or not so you have to ask why well i have to ask why because i want to give you an answer
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the its stroke its apostrophe s issue has evolved to be that way i guess and it's likely that this
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has happened to make the the its i t s with no apostrophe conform to some of the other possessives
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like yours his hers ours theirs and who's so you do not use yours and when you write yours you don't
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put an apostrophe and nor his nor hers nor ours nor theirs just remember that it apostrophe s always
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means it is or it has so i've chucked in a few examples of things that although i've done a
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fan number of examples already i thought i'd throw in a few examples of what you should never write
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thanks to watch out for and things to avoid one of the things you'll often see is and obviously
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in front in shops and stuff something like apples with an apostrophe apple apostrophe s some
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some price two dollars two pounds a kilo i've put here i have no idea if that's true or not
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that is generally referred to as the green grosses apostrophe or green grosses apostrophes
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it's the case of these things in that case it's written with green grosser apostrophe s
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meaning a single green grosser or green grosser s apostrophe which means all green grosses tend to do it
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this make mistake is astonishingly common you'll see all over the place but the thing is that
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many writers seem to assume that all words that end in s should have an apostrophe
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so don't add an apostrophe to word just because it ends with an s so you wouldn't write
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these bananas are overripe by writing bananas with an apostrophe s there you're talking about the
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plural form of bananas not the possessive one bananas don't possess anything or at least in your
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sentence they don't there's a brilliant example from grammar monster again that i've referred to
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again i've borrowed that one example cited it i think you'd say and the example is i like pigs
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dogs look up to us cats look down on us pigs treat us as equals but the inner trouble is
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every word that every plural in the example it's been written incorrectly because it's got a
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it's been turned into a possessive with an apostrophe so pigs is pig apostrophe s dogs is dog
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apostrophe s cats is cat apostrophe s and so on and even equals is equal apostrophe s so don't do
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that think about it i see this all the time i've read about three websites today and other things
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which which do this it's as if people think oh i'm putting an s on the end of this word it
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must need an apostrophe but it only needs an apostrophe if it refers to a possessive so that's
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pretty much the end except that i wanted to say as i've already alluded to i'm probably going to do
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another episode on this possibly more than one i don't know so i tried to make this as straightforward
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as i can covering the sort of basics of it there are other factors that define where and when to use
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apostrophes and there are style guides that that define the recommended way of doing it and there
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is some odd edge condition as well that we might want to look at so i might look at this in more
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detail at a later episode that if you look at that Wikipedia reference i've mentioned several times
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then it does dig very deeply into it so if you're up for it have a look at that and particularly if
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you feel that it would be useful to cover this subject in a bit more depth then do let me know
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through the comments or email and that will motivate me to try and turn what is a complicated subject
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into something that's a bit more digestible at least that's the intention all right so i hope
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you found that useful and not too long and that's it for now bye now
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org
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