Let us note, first of all, that hyperbole and apostrophe are the forms of language not only most agreeable to it but also most necessary. |
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We all know that in English you form the possessive by adding an apostrophe. |
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Further, the use of apostrophe in the form of direct addresses to the saints creates the impression of direct communication. |
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Blog entries lean heavily on the greengrocer's apostrophe, with numerous photographs of offending signs. |
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Purists and pedants alike regularly blench when they see the things even supposedly careful writers do with the apostrophe. |
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I'm expecting Jason to rupture a blood vessel over the missing apostrophe there. |
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Using an apostrophe to show plurals of numbers, letters, and figures is optional. |
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Pitches are specified by the letters A-G and a-g, optionally followed by an apostrophe or a comma. |
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And unlike the elegies the sonnets are predominantly poems of invocation, apostrophe and direct address, he writes. |
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As much as it pains me to admit it, there may not be an important moral argument for using an apostrophe rather than a tick mark. |
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And it would certainly be a mercy if signwriters and greengrocers gave up on the apostrophe. |
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Unfortunately, when Isabella got her paper back, the errant apostrophe had been allowed to go uncorrected. |
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This is the only example of an apostrophe used in a place name in New Zealand. |
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No diacritic marks are normally used for native English words, unless the apostrophe and the diaeresis sign are counted as such. |
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For what it's worth, the offending sign uses an apostrophe to suggest the possessive of a singular noun instead of the plural intention. |
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Still others prefer a middle option that keeps the apostrophe for omission and elision but drops it for plurality and possession. |
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The concept of the possessive apostrophe appears to have evaded his fine mind. |
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Mallard's examples of rampant apostrophization not surprisingly include the much-maligned greengrocer's apostrophe. |
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Not the exclamation mark, however, which smacks of laughing at one's own joke. Readers moved to passion by a misplaced apostrophe are not alone. |
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A nameless person after my own heart had crossed out the extraneous apostrophe and written a comment berating the person for not knowing how to use the English language. |
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An apostrophe called a glottal stop represents a space and a slight pause. |
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The greengrocer's apostrophe is commonest in handwritten signs and greengrocers are prominent among those who often have to write quick, informal notices for public display. |
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Finally and most bizarrely, you have to hold the function key to type an apostrophe, which left me incurably enraged. |
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Use an apostrophe to indicate a missing letter or contracted word. |
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I assume that I have that correct, as it is many grocers who have apostrophes and therefore the apostrophe goes after the s which indicates the plural. |
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Opening with an apostrophe to the Queen, the poet wastes no time in presenting her with the image of Mother France being captured, stripped, and beaten by her own children. |
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The apostrophe, though, is common but random. Its use for omitted letters is ancient. |
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Notice that after the first apostrophe, you no longer need to use an apostrophe when defining the inner lists. |
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You are now able to create and look up invoices that have the apostrophe character as part of the invoice number. |
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Why did they select the spelling with the greengrocer's apostrophe? |
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Ruderman, citing family reasons, eventually returned, and Osberg, Larry Platt and his apostrophe were unceremoniously removed. |
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The terms parenthesis, apostrophe, ellipsis, and appositive, which traditionally were rhetorical terms, have been relegated to discussions of punctuation. |
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The attached letter informs the offending parties of their apparent error, and goes on to explain the correct use of the apostrophe with the help of several examples. |
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It is also just about possible, but only at the margins of plausibility, that the apostrophe inserted into Finnegans Wake is a deliberate mistake. |
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Begin with the root word, the single or plural noun to which you will add the apostrophe. |
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So let us turn to a more cosmic matter: Is it not possible, at long last, to settle on a broadly accepted use, or nonuse, of the apostrophe to describe the day? |
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The Court added that on the other hand, Olivia's trade-mark had been used consistently and in the same manner since its first use save for the addition of the olive leaf apostrophe which was added later on. |
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As the member for Mississauga East knows, when a bill goes to committee stage the government votes away every word, letter and apostrophe from the bill that was passed in the House to kill that bill. |
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The next step is to change the IF statements in row 5 into text by inserting an apostrophe before each of the equal signs. |
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But that apostrophe is a mistake as painful as a charley horse. |
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The of and the apostrophe make for a double possessive, which is idiomatically proper. |
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Because there has been no k in the word for over 700 years, representing its omission with an apostrophe seems pointless. |
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After pleading guilty to conspiracy to vandalize government property — they had relocated a wayward apostrophe and inserted a comma — the young grammarians were barred from national parks for a year. |
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These writings also introduced what came to be known as the apologetic apostrophe, generally occurring where a consonant exists in the Standard English cognate. |
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But in the lyric, the soliloquy is the norm, and many conversations are imaginary, notably in the projective modes of apostrophe and prosopopoeia. |
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