English in Use/Apostrophes
General | Contents • Introduction |
Parts of speech | Articles • Nouns • Verbs • Gerunds and participles • Pronouns • Adjectives • Adverbs • Prepositions, Conjunctions and Interjections |
Other topics | Orthography • Punctuation • Syntax • Figures of Syntax • Glossary |
External | Resources |
An apostrophe can be used to form possessives for nouns, indicate the omission of letters in a word for stylistic purposes or as a colloquial form of a word, and be used to indicate plurality.
The term is derived from the Latin word apostrophus itself derived from the Greek words αποστροφος meaning accident of elision αποστρεφειν meaning a turning away.
The apostrophe usually denotes either the possessive case of a noun, or the elision of one or more letters of a word: as,
- "The girl's regard to her parents' advice;"
'Gan, lov'd, e'en, thro'; for began, loved, even, through.
It is sometimes used in pluralizing a mere letter or sign: as,
- "Two a's—three 6's."
Apostrophe is also a figure of speech in which an absent person, a personified inanimate being, or an abstraction, is addressed as though present.
This sense is maintained when a narrative or dramatic thread is broken in order to digress by speaking directly to someone not there, e.g.,
- “Envy, be silent and attend!”—Alexander Pope.
- “On a Certain Lady at Court.”
Introduction · About | |
Words: | Articles · Nouns · Pronouns · Verbs · Adjectives · Adverbs · Prepositions, Conjunctions, and Interjections · Verbals |
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Sentences: | Sentences Overview · Basic Components · Phrases · Clauses · Fragments and Run-on Sentences |
Usage: | Adjective and Adverb Usage · Pronoun Usage · Subject-verb Agreement · Verb Usage |
Punctuation: | End Marks · Commas · Apostrophes · Quotations · Other Common Punctuation Marks · Less Common Typographical Marks |
Other key topics: | Time and Date · Capitalization · Spelling · Figures of Syntax · Syntax · Recent Grammar Restructure Attempts |
Appendices: | Glossary · Q&A · External Resources · Common errors · History · Dictionary · Thesaurus |