Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>>>can you please please tell me once and for all where to put the apostrophes and any other grammar mistakes you think I make? If you have the guts post it to the Lug too<<< Sure. First, apostrophes. Everybody knows that the apostrophe replaces missing letters in phrases such as "John's coming home," which is an abbreviation of "John is coming home." In that phrase, the apostrophe replaces the letter "i." Where most people get stuck is in applying the apostrophe for possession. What they don't realize is that the apostrophe replaces missing letters in these cases, too. Originally, possession was indicated by the word "his." Thus, to say that an axe belonged to John, in Middle English one would write "John, his axe." With the "hi-" contracted, this becomes English possessive: John's axe. (Yes, this is sexist: because what in Middle English would have been "Mary, her book" is not abbreviated to "Mary'r book," as it would be if the rule were consistently applied, but to "Mary's book," which is a vestige of "Mary his book." Oh well! The consolation is that this apostrophe-s gets extended to inanimate objects, too: "the Summicron's main advantage," and so forth.) The apostrophe before an "s" ALWAYS replaces missing letters, either an "i-" as in "is," "ha-" as in "has"--or else an "hi-" in this obsolete possessive sense. This suggests the best test of whether an apostrophe is needed or properly placed: simply insert the letters you suppose it replaces and see if the phrase still parses. At the Photo show in NYC, I was presented with the inaugural issue of a _printed_ magazine that announced on its t.o.c. page that it contained "Essay's, page 6." Augh! Then, on the very next page, we were offered "Editors comments." My mauled sensibilities are still vibrating. Possessive "its"--a thing belonging to it--never gets an apostrophe, even if the noun itself does, because it is...well, an it (i.e., not a noun). Thus, "The new TTL's shutter-speed dial is larger; and on the black cameras, its color is black." This makes sense if you think back to the apostrophe replacing the "hi-" in "his." Even if you have a low opinion of the Middle English, running around in metal suits and hacking away at each other with broadswords, you wouldn't presume them so stupid as to use phrases like "It, his axe" or "It, her book," would you? So if you run across the phrase, "It's color is black" And wanted to apply my test, just insert letters in place of the apostrophe: "It is color is black"; "it has color is black"; "it his color is black." You can see that those don't work. So leave the apostrophe out. What appeared on page six are not "Essay Is" but Essays (which were predictably woeful, in case there were to be any doubt). Plural "s" (two threadmount cameras, a set of Summicrons), does not need an apostrophe except when its absence offends the eye, as for example when you're pluralizing something such as "Nikon N90s." Several of those would properly be "several Nikon N90ss," which is ugly. So we dispense with propriety, insert the apostrophe, and sigh. "I saw several Nikon N90s's adorning interlopers at the Leica convention" is an adequate use of the apostrophe, although inelegant and not strictly proper. On the other hand, anyone who ever pluralizes "camera" as "camera's" should be stripped of his or her college degree, assuming the one they possess isn't a forgery to begin with. Ahem. Just a little editorializing, there. In case you're wondering about the odd use of the apostrophe AFTER the "s," this is simply used when BOTH plural and possessive apply, but aren't pronounced. The editor's comments" refers to one editor. If you were talking about the comments of several editors, to be consistent you would write "the editors's comments." But we don't pronounce both s's, (Editorzzz-zzz comments), so we drop the second "s," and this is how the apostrophe appears to end up past the final "s"--it hasn't, really; it's just that the real final "s" has gone into hiding. So we write "the Editors' comments" when it's more than one editor we're referring to. Incidentally, this protocol of writing what you say also holds true when signifying the possessive of a word that ends in "s." Ansel's last name was Adams, not Adam; so if something belonged to him, it was Ansel Adams's. To write "Ansel Adams' book _The Negative_" is one of those instances of middlebrow faux-propriety, as when some people insecurely write "I" when they mean "me" because they think "I" is more likely to be grammatical. As: "it looks good to Alastair and I." Wrong-O. Anyway, if you say "Adams's," then write "Adams's." The only other thing that really grates on my ear on the LUG (and everywhere else) is "who" and "that." Think of what the word "points" to. Humans are "who" and things are "that." "Thanks to those that wrote me privately," "The Luggers that were at the Leica convention," "I've got a girlfriend that likes Leicas," etc., are borderline illiterate. Thank all those WHO wrote you privately; refer to the Luggers WHO were at the show; you have a girlfriend WHO likes Leicas, etc. To see how it grates on the trained ear, turn it around: "I bought a silver Leica M6 who I really like," "I prefer D-76, who I dilute 1+1." Again, people who never finished high school may be excused for not following this rule, since they had other things to think about. Others, well.... Blatant misusage is rampant; but don't give in. Please realize that these suggestions are not offered under any delusion of my own superiority. It's just what I do for a living. Believe me, I realize full well that you could run rings around ME when it comes to what YOU do for a living. So don't think I'm being uppity with my snappy comments. Just trying to add a bit of humor to what is naturally a dry subject. - --Mike the Ed.