Structure: The Use Of Possesive Apostrophe SS2 English Studies Lesson Note
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Lesson Notes
Topic: Structure: The Use Of Possesive Apostrophe

We use the apostrophe (‘) to achieve the following in sentences:
- To indicate the genitive of nouns and noun phrases. The genitive is also the possessive form of a noun. E.g:
i. The girl’s book
ii. The girl’s books
iii. A child’s toy
iv. Dorcas’ money (you pronounce it Dorcas’s money)
Note that the genitive form of a word is the same as the possessive form of that word. If your name is Joan, the genitive form of Joan is Joan’s, while the genitive form of people is people’s.
- To indicate the genitive of indefinite pronouns. E.g:
i. This is someone’s child.
ii. It is nobody’s business.
iii. It is everybody’s business.
- To mark contractions in words, such as:
i. can’t (cannot)
ii. won’t (will not)
iii. hasn’t (has not)
- To indicate plurals of numbers, letters, items, figures and cited words or expressions.
WORDS FOR THE WEEK
Morass, Abject, Blandish, Duplicity, Ennui, Maudlin, Abscond, Alias, Dither, Emaciated