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Apostrophe (punctuation)

An apostrophe (' or ) is a punctuation mark in languages written in the Latin alphabet. It marks omissions, forms the possessive, and, in special cases, forms plurals.

Usage

Things to note

Tip

To check you've got it right, swap the sentence around so that the part before the apostrophe becomes the last word. If the sense hasn't changed, you've got it right.

Pens' lids becomes lids of the pens.
Boy's hats becomes hats of the boy.
Boys' hats becomes hats of the boys.
Children's hats becomes hats of the children.
Two weeks' notice becomes notice of two weeks.
One week's notice becomes notice of one week.

But childrens' hats becomes hats of the childrens, so must be wrong.


In computer programming, the non-leaning apostrophe (') corresponds to Unicode and ASCII character 39, or 0x0027. The (preferred) right-leaning apostrophe () corresponds to Unicode character 0x2019.

See also: apostrophe (rhetoric).

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump