This is one of the most common problems people have with punctuation – the dreaded apostrophe. This poor little pet is the most abused punctuation mark in the language, and it’s a dear little thing when you get to know it – all it wants to do is to please. It has only two functions to perform and they’re both straightforward, but still, it gets pushed in where it doesn’t belong or left out of where it wants to be.
Let’s take a moment to sort this out once and for all.
Just When Do You Use An Apostrophe?
1. Use the apostrophe to show omission
What’s a nice kid like me doing in a place like this? We started with two words, what and is, but because this is informal writing, we want to express it informally, so we omit a letter from the word is. Because we’re well brought up little Vegemites (remember?), we let people know what we’ve done.- I could’ve danced all night. (could have, not could ‘of’)
- It’s time for breakfast. (It is time…)
- It’s been raining all day. (It has been raining…)
2. Use the apostrophe to show possession
- We went to Marmaduke’s restaurant for dinner. (Marmaduke owns the restaurant; it is the restaurant of Marmaduke.)
- We knew whom to blame for the missing pie; there was cream all over the dog’s whiskers!
- Jesus’s disciples.
- Jesus’ disciples.
- The princess’s chair.
3. Using the apostrophe with plural nouns
Confusion arises when the apostrophe is used with a plural noun. At the zoo, the children were most interested in seeing the lions’ den. More than one lion owns the den, so we add the apostrophe after the ‘s’ (this is the den of the lions). So, the general rule is:- if there’s one owner – add an apostrophe and then ‘s’
- if there are two or more owners – add ‘s’ then an apostrophe.
4. Exceptions to the rules about apostrophes
However, (and of course you’re not surprised to hear this, are you?), there are exceptions to this rule. For words which form their plural by changing internal letters (instead of adding ‘s’), the apostrophe comes before the ‘s’.- It was the children’s turn to wash up.
5. How to use the apostrophe with joint possession
When you have ‘joint possession’ – when two or more people (or subjects) own one item and both (or all) of their names are mentioned, the apostrophe is applied only to the second (or last) name.- We had coffee at Ermintrude and Marmaduke’s mansion.
- Chris’s car
- Bridget Jones’s Diary
- Bill Thomas’s car
- the Thomases’ new house (add -es to names that end in S to indicate plural form).
- Cecile's and Jona's bags are inside the room. (They own two different bags, instead of sharing one.)
6. Using it with expressions of time
The apostrophe is also used with many expressions of time (to show that the time period owns the other noun):- an hour’s time
- a year’s holiday
7. When not to use the apostrophe
BUT notice that we do not use the apostrophe with possessive pronouns (remember, these are the little guys who step in and lend a paw to nouns).- After dinner at Marmaduke’s restaurant, we went back to his place for coffee.
- The bird’s feathers were ruffled. (The bird owns the feathers.)
- The bird ruffled its feathers. (The feathers are owned by the bird, but the pronoun its is being used instead of the noun, so there is NO apostrophe.)
- The bird ruffled its (it is?) feathers. (NO)
- It’s (it is?) a lovely day. (YES)
Tips For Using It Correctly
To summarise, here is a good way to check if you need an apostrophe – for future reference: If you can substitute the use of “of” then you use the apostrophe.- This is Marmaduke’s house. It is the house of Marmaduke.
- The children’s mother phoned. The mother of the children phoned.
- Three months’ work. The work of three months.





