Rules for the correct use of the apostrophe.

In UK and US English, the apostrophe is used:

To indicate the possessive. To indicate missing letters. Sometimes to indicate the structure of unusual words.

1. To indicate the possessive.

This is Peter's book.

book. This book is Peter's .

. The dog's dinner looks disgusting.

dinner looks disgusting. Diana was the people's princess.

princess. I tore up the men's shirts.

shirts. One should choose one's words carefully.

words carefully. It is everyone's duty to protest.

duty to protest. It is no-one's responsibility.

Personal pronouns (words like I, you, he, she, it, we, they) indicate the possessive by becoming a whole new word. These new words are already possessive, so they don't need an apostrophe: my, mine, your, yours, his, her, hers, its, our, ours, their, theirs. Note that none of them has an apostrophe.

The house is yours .

. The dog broke its leg.

leg. She said the book was hers .

. They claimed it was theirs .

. But really it was ours .

It's means it is or it has . There's no such word as its'.

2. To indicate missing letters in the middle of words or phrases.

You can't have it.

have it. Don't do that!

do that! I'd like an ice-cream, please.

like an ice-cream, please. We'd better hurry.

But we don't always use apostrophes:

15, Elm Rd .

. St Matthew Passion

Matthew Passion Photo is short for photograph.

is short for It is easier to say CD than Compact Disc.

In the cases where you wouldn't use an apostrophe in the singular, don't use it for the plural:

I had one photo .

. They had two photos .

. We sell CDs and DVDs .

and . I was born in the 1960s .

But we say this CD's broken because it's a short form of this CD is broken.

3. Sometimes to indicate the structure of unusual words.

A few words are sufficiently confusing that we want to indicate to the reader how the word is constructed. The apostrophe can be used for this if it is really necessary, but mostly it isn't.

He bcc'd a copy to all the managers.

a copy to all the managers. Mind your p's and q's .

and . Dot your i's and cross your t's .

and cross your . A list of do's and don'ts .

But you might consider:

He sent a blind copy to all the managers

Mind your p s and q s

s and s Dot your i s and cross your t s

s and cross your s A list of DOs and DON'Ts.

There's no need for it in:

She got three As in her exams.

in her exams. All our CDs are perfect.

are perfect. We sell videos .

. I'd like two cappuccinos , please.

Childrens' shoes or children's shoes?

The apostrophe goes directly after the thing doing the possessing:

The sun 's rays = the rays of the sun.

's rays = the rays of the The table 's leg = the leg of the table.

's leg = the leg of the The archbishop 's palace = the palace of the archbishop.

's palace = the palace of the The archbishops ' palace = the palace of the archbishops.

' palace = the palace of the The men 's shirts = the shirts of the men.

's shirts = the shirts of the Children 's T-shirts = T-shirts of children.

's T-shirts = T-shirts of The people 's princess = the princess of the people.

's princess = the princess of the The American peoples ' inheritance = the inheritance of the American peoples.

' inheritance = the inheritance of the American My mother 's photo = photo of my mother.

's photo = photo of my One week 's notice = notice of one week.

's notice = notice of one Two weeks ' notice = notice of two weeks.

' notice = notice of two Three years ' experience = experience of three years.

' experience = experience of three Everyone 's help = help of everyone.

Note that we can often use for instead of of  shirts for the men. The possessive is much a looser concept than ownership: the girls may not own the school, but it's still a girls' school .

The apostrophe is used to show a connection between two things: if a dog has a bone, it's the dog 's bone. But sometimes there is no possessive connection.

Sometimes the relationship is adjectival, not possessive:

Accounts department

Sports car

The accounts don't have the department, and the sports don't have a car  it's a department of type "accounts", and a car of type "sports". We could just as well have written:

Marketing department

Two-door car

A department of type "marketing" and a car of type "two-door". Clearly not possessive.

Sometimes there's no thing to possess or be possessed:

Twelve weeks pregnant

There's no such thing as a "pregnant", and the twelve weeks can't have one, so the phrase is not possessive. We could say twelve weeks' notice and two years' experience , because there are such things as notice and experience, and in some sense they are linked to ("given by" if you like) the twelve weeks and the two years. (Technically, pregnant is an adjective, notice and experience are nouns. Possessive phrases need two nouns – one to possess and one to be possessed.)

A forty-week pregnancy

The pregnancy is not linked to a "forty-week". In forty weeks' pregnancy , the pregnancy is linked to forty weeks.

She walks the dog

You sometimes see She walk's the dog , but this is wrong. The walks here is not the possessive of a walk, but the present tense of the verb to walk. Verbs never take possessive apostrophes. It should be she walks the dog.

CD's and video's for sale .

This is also wrong – there's nothing in the sentence to be possessed by the CD or the video. It should be plural, not possessive: CDs and videos for sale. It would be OK to say the CD's label was coming off , and the video's price was wrong , because the CD does have a label, and the video does have a price.

Sometimes it's just a plural:

I own three Fords.

I reckon Sonys are the best DVD players.

are the best DVD players. I've sold three Ford Mondeos and two Ford Kas.

Join the discussion

Some usage is not settled. Debate rages over James's book and James' book , over Farmers Market and Farmers' Market . If accounts department doesn't need an apostrophe, what about customers car park ?

Ask questions and debate any language point at our discussion board. Everyone is welcome.

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