Table of Contents
- 1 Do you put an apostrophe after a last name that ends in s?
- 2 How do you plural a name that ends in s?
- 3 Do you put an apostrophe after each name?
- 4 How do you pluralize a last name that ends in i?
- 5 Is it Travis or Travis’s?
- 6 How do you make a last name ending in Z possessive?
- 7 How do you add an apostrophe to a word ending in s?
- 8 Do you put an apostrophe after the possessive in a name?
- 9 How do you write possessive of a name ending in X?
Do you put an apostrophe after a last name that ends in s?
For names ending in s, form the possessive either by simply adding an apostrophe (James’ books) or by adding an apostrophe as well as another s (Charles’s phone). The possessive of a plural name is always formed by adding an apostrophe after the final s (the Smiths’ dog, the Harrises’ family home).
How do you plural a name that ends in s?
Names are pluralized like regular words. Add -es for names ending in “s” or “z” and add -s for everything else. When indicating the possessive, if there is more than one owner add an apostrophe to the plural; if there is one owner, add ‘s to the singular (The Smiths’ car vs. Smith’s car).
How do you write possession with a name that ends in s?
The general rule is that the possessive of a singular noun is formed by adding an apostrophe and s, whether the singular noun ends in s or not. The possessive of a plural noun is formed by adding only an apostrophe when the noun ends in s, and by adding both an apostrophe and s when it ends in a letter other than s.
Do you put an apostrophe after each name?
Find this useful? When two or more people separately own the same type of thing, you should add an apostrophe after each person’s name. If two or more people jointly own something, you should treat them as a single “subject” and you only need one apostrophe.
How do you pluralize a last name that ends in i?
Rule: To show plural possession, make the proper noun plural first, then use the apostrophe. Examples: I petted the Murphys’ cat. I visited the Murphys’ store on Main Street.
Does the plural of a family name have an apostrophe?
Don’t use an apostrophe to make your last name plural. Apostrophes can be used to show possession—à la the Smiths’ house or Tim Johnson’s pad— but they don’t indicate there’s more than one person in your family.
Is it Travis or Travis’s?
Travis sounds like Traviz: This is Travis’s house. (correct and sounds better) This is Travis’ house.
How do you make a last name ending in Z possessive?
To form the possessive of a proper noun ending in an s or z sound, some people use apostrophe + s, as in Perez’s and Burns’s, and others prefer an apostrophe alone, as in Perez’ and Burns’s.
How do you come up with a last name?
Glance through character or place names in the book to get some ideas. It can also help to compare last names from your characters to the story you’re skimming. Ask yourself whether or not your character’s last name would fit or stand out in a book with similar themes. Avoid simply copying last names.
How do you add an apostrophe to a word ending in s?
Rule 1c. Some writers and editors add only an apostrophe to all nouns ending in s.And some add an apostrophe + s to every proper noun, be it Hastings’s or Jones’s. One method, common in newspapers and magazines, is to add an apostrophe + s (‘s) to common nouns ending in s, but only a stand-alone apostrophe to proper nouns ending in s. Examples:
Do you put an apostrophe after the possessive in a name?
Well, it actually depends on how your pronounce the plural possessive. Oxford Dictionary tells us: With personal names that end in -s: add an apostrophe plus s when you would naturally pronounce an extra s if you said the word out loud . . . With personal names that end in -s but are not spoken with an extra s: just add an apostrophe after the -s.
Do you put an apostrophe after the s in James?
With personal names that end in -s but are not spoken with an extra s: just add an apostrophe after the -s. For James, the plural possessive sounds as if it has two S sounds when we pronounce it, so we would use an apostrophe and an S.
How do you write possessive of a name ending in X?
Some writers prefer to form the possessive of a name ending in x or z by adding only an apostrophe, since the name already ends in a sibilant sound. However, using an additional s is preferred in most formal styles .