Originally posted by Stewart P Evans
View Post
However, a lot of confusion is caused where an ordinary noun (one not requiring a capital letter) ends in 's' and is possessive. For example, the business students at my college have enormous difficulty with the plural possessive of business. This requires them to add es to make the word plural (businesses) and then add an apostrophe to make it possessive - as in businesses' policies. The first challenge is to get them spelling business correctly! The second is to get them to realise that the apostrophe in most plural possessives is placed after the 's' - excpet for words such as men's, women's, children's, and people's.
Comment