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		Grammar and Linguistics > Please do me a favor!     
			
		 Please do me a favor! 
		
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 ngthsang
 
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							| Please do me a favor! 
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							| WHich is correct? "This is my boss � car." OR"This is my boss �s car" Thanks a lot. |  23 Jan 2017      
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| Only  �this is my boss �s car � is correct. You must include the apostrophe s. |  24 Jan 2017     
					
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 douglas
 
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							|  It �s a debated topic, but a significant majority (including myself) say you always add aprostophe  �s� to a singular noun.     So "my boss�s" would be correct.
 
       |  24 Jan 2017     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| I agree with Douglas. Also, it makes teaching possessives much easier to have only one rule for all singular possessives.   I was just reading an article at  Grammarphobia about it. I like their reasoning that if you pronounce it the same as "bosses", then it doesn �t make sense to spell it without adding the s after the apostrophe.
 Note: The link to Grammarphobia just takes you to their site, not to the article I was reading.   Bruce  |  24 Jan 2017     
					
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 cunliffe
 
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							| This is my boss car �  is Northern English for  �this is the best car ever. � 
 Edit: I think this business is now resolved - I remember it being taught as optional when I was at school some time before the Punic Wars - and you do need the �s. There are a few exceptions - St James� Hospital comes to mind and there may be one or two other examples, but they seem strange nowadays.  |  24 Jan 2017     
					
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 a2king
 
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							| @ Bruce- Can you explain more about what you said? 
 I have thought that the way we are writing (spelling) based on our pronunciation.
 For example:  The boys � s toys --> this one is difficult for us to pronounce, because it contains 2 sounds /s/ at the same time. So native speakers will eliminate 1 sound /s/. And that is the reason why we have "The boys � toys".
 
   But with the singular nouns ending with /s/, we can optionally put 1 or 2 letters S.    For example: 
 1) My boss  �s office = my boss � office.  --> but when I teach my students, I always say that in written language, we should write 2 letters S for this case, because we have the rule that: "you always add aprostophe �s� to a singular noun". However, in spoken language, we just pronounce 1 sound /s/, the natives can understand us.     2) The Smiths  �s house  = The Smiths � house.   --> in this case, 1 letter S is enough, because "The Smiths" is a plural noun.     |  26 Jan 2017     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| I see you are a little confused. It has less to do with pronunciation than you think.   With plural nouns ending in s, you add only an apostrophe, and the pronunciation doesn �t change. The boys � is pronounced the same as The boys and The boy �s.  These are the boys � toys. These are the boy �s toys. These toys belong to the boys.   (The pronunciation is the same in all three cases)   Although it isn �t actually a rule, I think it is good that you teach your students always to use    �s   for singular nouns, but I want to emphasize that the s is pronounced.   So the possessive "boss �s" and the plural "bosses" are pronounced the same.  That is the point of the Grammarphobia article - that it makes more sense to write  " boss �s " than to write " boss � ", because the "extra" s is going to be pronounced with either spelling.   I hope this helps you.   Bruce  |  26 Jan 2017     
					
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 a2king
 
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							| @Bruce - Your answer is perfectly clear. Thanks for your explanation.  |  27 Jan 2017     
					
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