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- From: eepjm@wombat.newcastle.edu.au (Peter Moylan)
- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Subject: Re: Apostrophes in Plural forms?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.104929.1@wombat.newcastle.edu.au>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 23:49:29 GMT
- References: <1992Nov18.054810.12567@noose.ecn.purdue.edu>
- Sender: news@seagoon.newcastle.edu.au
- Organization: University of Newcastle, AUSTRALIA
- Lines: 33
-
- In article <1992Nov18.054810.12567@noose.ecn.purdue.edu>, srinivas@lips.ecn.purdue.edu (The Abode of Wealth) writes:
- >
- > I have noticed that people use an apostrophe in writing "1960s". What is
- > right, "1960s" or "1960's"? I feel that the use of an apostrophe is
- > wrong because when the words are used instead of numbers, "sixties"
-
- Here's the rule I use. I think it's fairly standard.
-
- (a) Normally an apostrophe is not used (unless, of course, a
- possessive is intended, or when an apostrophe replaces omitted
- letters). Thus "the 1960s" is correct.
- (b) Exception: after a one-letter word, or where confusion would
- otherwise result, some sort of mark is needed to separate the
- final 's' from the rest of the word. Sometimes the apostrophe
- is the best choice here, although quotation marks are often better.
- Examples:
- Mind your p's and q's.
- The room was filled with "hi"s as everyone arrived.
- (Yes, I know that that's an ugly sentence, but I was struggling
- to find an example.)
- In the case of an acronym or other word written entirely in
- upper case, I find the change of case a sufficient marker:
- Of the several ANUs around the world, I am familiar only
- with the Australian one.
- Some people would use an apostrophe here, though, to avoid
- ambiguity.
-
- (Of course, some people would use an apostrophe just about anywhere,
- but that's a different story. For poor spellers, the rule used is
- "throw in apostrophes at random".)
-
- --
- Peter Moylan eepjm@wombat.newcastle.edu.au
-