Apostrophe crimes
Re: Apostrophe crimes
Preference, please.
• But in that era Lehman had alternated from single-A1 to single-A2, so …
• But in that era Lehman had alternated between single-A1 and single-A2, so …
• Other?
• But in that era Lehman had alternated from single-A1 to single-A2, so …
• But in that era Lehman had alternated between single-A1 and single-A2, so …
• Other?
Re: Apostrophe crimes
Depends, but probably between.
From/to implies just a single change, which makes "alternated" seem out of place but not entirely incorrect. Between/and implies multiple changes.
From/to implies just a single change, which makes "alternated" seem out of place but not entirely incorrect. Between/and implies multiple changes.
Glenn Elliott
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Re: Apostrophe crimes

This is both a German and English apostrophe crime. In German the apostrophe simply shouldn't be there. In English, the apostrophe is in the wrong place, as the article 'die' indicates that this is plural: the Lohners (as in the Lohner family - their Bernkastel bakery). Thus it should come after the s.
Moral: get it right in one tongue and don't be so promiscuous.
Daniel J.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Gotcha. So the labs don't impact the business. I'll let the service engineers know that they're no longer needed.Microsoft Real Estate & Facilities wrote:Testing will mimic a utility power loss. There should be no business impact from these tests and no labs should not be affected.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Please Derek, what is a Scotish Dudelsack, and where is yours?

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Re: Apostrophe crimes
A Dudelsack it where you hide your spare Ts. I wear mine like a Sporran.djewesbury wrote:Please Derek, what is a Scotish Dudelsack, and where is yours?
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
AHB wrote:Is Pitter's Port what Gordon's Wine Bar on Villier's Street sells as its house port?
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Sorry. Now corrected.djewesbury wrote:AHB wrote:Is Pitters Port what Gordons Wine Bar on Villiers Street sells as it's house port?
Top Ports in 2024: Niepoort 1900 Colheita, b.1971. A near perfect Port.
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
2025: Quevedo 1972 Colheita, b.2024. Just as good as Niepoort 1900!
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
In that nest of possessives an apostrophe crime was almost understandable. Almost.AHB wrote:Sorry. Now corrected.djewesbury wrote:AHB wrote:Is Pitters Port what Gordons Wine Bar on Villiers Street sells as it's house port?
Daniel J.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Presumably a very large font size is recommended.DRT wrote:Those who have not been in a comma for the past month or so
Re: Apostrophe crimes
[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=81487#p81487]Here[/url] DRT wrote:A booking of the very large room normally attracts a £500 minimum spend, which Simon agreed to wave on the basis that …
Re: Apostrophe crimes
[over my head icon}jdaw1 wrote:[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=81487#p81487]Here[/url] DRT wrote:A booking of the very large room normally attracts a £500 minimum spend, which Simon agreed to wave on the basis that …
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Sits back. In one corner, Derek, bemused and cowering. In the other, Owen and Daniel, daggers drawn — which poisoned? — and the show about to start. Bread and circuses.DRT wrote:[over my head icon}
Even the mis-matched brackets herald an unequal fight.
Re: Apostrophe crimes
My Paratrooper training tells me that I should bow out of this argument and live to fight another day.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
Ernest H. Cockburn
Re: Apostrophe crimes
jdaw1 wrote:Derek, bemused and cowering.
Re: Apostrophe crimes
Is there a dignified way out available if I sign a waiver?
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
I just saw this. Better start waving my poisoned arrows at you then.
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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
This and some subsequent posts moved here from 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23 by jdaw1.
Rage has clouded your grammar chip 
djewesbury wrote:Roberson's


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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
No. You are thinking of jam perhaps?flash_uk wrote:djewesbury wrote:Roberson'sRage has clouded your grammar chip
I am thinking of these people, and I am using a possessive apostrophe after a singular name. If I have committed some other crime, please specify.
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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
No other crime, just that onedjewesbury wrote:I am using a possessive apostrophe after a singular name. If I have committed some other crime, please specify.

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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
Mr Smith is a butcher. His shop is called J Smith, not J Smith's. However, we say, when popping out for a chop, "I'm just going to Smith's, back in ten minutes".flash_uk wrote:No other crime, just that onedjewesbury wrote:I am using a possessive apostrophe after a singular name. If I have committed some other crime, please specify.Still don't see how that is not grammatically meaningless. What would be wrong with "Email sent to Roberson", Roberson being the shortened version of the business which is fully Roberson Wine.
Mr Roberson is a wine merchant (albeit a rather inefficient one). His shop is called Roberson Wine. However, we say, when complaining that he sent us the wrong bottle of 1985, "Email sent to Roberson's".
I would use this form in both the singular and the plural.
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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
Mmm. I still require convincing that this is not also grammatically incorrect. I agree the phrase "I'm just going to Smith's" may be used often but that doesn't make it correct. How about Primark, Tesco or Ryman. "I'm just going to Primark's to buy some socks." Doesn't work for me.djewesbury wrote:Mr Smith is a butcher. His shop is called J Smith, not J Smith's. However, we say, when popping out for a chop, "I'm just going to Smith's, back in ten minutes".flash_uk wrote:No other crime, just that onedjewesbury wrote:I am using a possessive apostrophe after a singular name. If I have committed some other crime, please specify.Still don't see how that is not grammatically meaningless. What would be wrong with "Email sent to Roberson", Roberson being the shortened version of the business which is fully Roberson Wine.
Mr Roberson is a wine merchant (albeit a rather inefficient one). His shop is called Roberson Wine. However, we say, when complaining that he sent us the wrong bottle of 1985, "Email sent to Roberson's".
I would use this form in both the singular and the plural.
Edit: ...perhaps an admin could kindly shift our little grammar spat into the appropriate thread, I really shouldn't have started it here

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2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
Primark is not someone's name. The examples I used are. Smith's = the shop of Smith. Roberson's = the shop of Roberson. Used thus since time immemorial, and correctly moreover. Simples.
(And yes. Ryman's. The shop of Ryman.)
EDIT: I had a lovely pot of Earl Grey and a tarte aux framboise in Valerie's today!
(And yes. Ryman's. The shop of Ryman.)
EDIT: I had a lovely pot of Earl Grey and a tarte aux framboise in Valerie's today!
Daniel J.
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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
Now I'm more convinceddjewesbury wrote:Primark is not someone's name. The examples I used are. Smith's = the shop of Smith. Roberson's = the shop of Roberson. Used thus since time immemorial, and correctly moreover. Simples.
(And yes. Ryman's. The shop of Ryman.)
EDIT: I had a lovely pot of Earl Grey and a tarte aux framboise in Valerie's today!

But why then do we see Ryman on those shops rather than Ryman's, yet Sainsbury's above all those grocery stores?
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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
Because different companies choose to do things differently. Personal preference at a particular point in time. Some choose a more colloquial brand ("Sainsbury's" - even though, when I was a child in the 1970s, the brand in big illuminated orange letters above the shop was "J Sainsbury"), some a more perfunctory and literal one ("Ryman").flash_uk wrote:Now I'm more convinceddjewesbury wrote:Primark is not someone's name. The examples I used are. Smith's = the shop of Smith. Roberson's = the shop of Roberson. Used thus since time immemorial, and correctly moreover. Simples.
(And yes. Ryman's. The shop of Ryman.)
EDIT: I had a lovely pot of Earl Grey and a tarte aux framboise in Valerie's today!![]()
But why then do we see Ryman on those shops rather than Ryman's, yet Sainsbury's above all those grocery stores?
Because there is no rule stating that we all have to do things one way.
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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
I'm off to bed!
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Re: 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23
+1 for the request to splice out the above chain of posts pleaseflash_uk wrote:Edit: ...perhaps an admin could kindly shift our little grammar spat into the appropriate thread, I really shouldn't have started it here

This and some previous posts moved here from 2014 pre-Harvest Tour tasting, London, 9/23 by jdaw1.
Re: Apostrophe crimes
So perhaps the rule would appear to be something like: a possessive apostrophe after a singular name may be used in situations where the object is implicit. Even though the object may be ambiguous. In this instance, it could be "Email sent to":
Roberson's shop
Roberson's customer service department
Roberson's mother
Roberson's incompetent warehouse chap
Roberson's shop
Roberson's customer service department
Roberson's mother
Roberson's incompetent warehouse chap
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
I think that the first would always be the obvious implicit meaning.flash_uk wrote:So perhaps the rule would appear to be something like: a possessive apostrophe after a singular name may be used in situations where the object is implicit. Even though the object may be ambiguous. In this instance, it could be "Email sent to":
Roberson's shop
Roberson's customer service department
Roberson's mother
Roberson's incompetent warehouse chap
Please note that out of deference to you, I referred to your employer in earlier email with no possessive apostrophe. I thought about adding one, but I guess I'm just too good.
Daniel J.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Which to me looked grammatically perfectdjewesbury wrote: Please note that out of deference to you, I referred to your employer in earlier email with no possessive apostrophe.

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Re: Apostrophe crimes
My poor grammar, spelling, punctuation, idiosyncratic/incomprehensible mangling of language hardly qualifies me as one to sit in judgement.jdaw1 wrote:Sits back. In one corner, Derek, bemused and cowering. In the other, Owen and Daniel, daggers drawn — which poisoned? — and the show about to start. Bread and circuses.DRT wrote:[over my head icon}
Even the mis-matched brackets herald an unequal fight.
Charitably I can only suppose that Derek was trying to show the truth of 'there is no 'I' in team' by leaving out the i in waive. He did it for all of us.
And has we have seen from the exchange between Daniel and Flash these things rapidly degenerate into the kind of arguments which begin with the choice of cutlery and end in divorce. We have got to, in the words of Mr Kravitz, let love rule.
Re: Apostrophe crimes
Sits back. In one corner, Owen, letting love rule. In the other, Derek and Daniel, daggers drawn — which poisoned? — and the show about to start. Bread and circuses.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
DRT wrote:Anything currently made by the Symington's would do.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
My correction was too slow. Speedy Gonzalez beat me to the draw.
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Quickest poisoned dagger in the business.DRT wrote:My correction was too slow. Speedy Gonzalez beat me to the draw.
Daniel J.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Oops.LGTrotter wrote:...Billy McKay was the presenters name (I think).
Re: Apostrophe crimes
[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=8896&start=25#p81756]Here[/url] benread wrote:Alex Sammonds definition
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Not once but thrice. I was tempted to post it but thought it was too much like shooting fish in a barrel. Ben, Ben, Ben…DRT wrote:[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=8896&start=25#p81756]Here[/url] benread wrote:Alex Sammonds definition
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Sorry. I left this as long as I could.
But there it still is.
Here, Jacob created a thread entitled
"Oporto and the Duoro"
But there it still is.
Here, Jacob created a thread entitled
"Oporto and the Duoro"
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Guilty as charged!
Ben
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Vintage 1970 and now proud owner of my first ever 'half-century'!
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Vintage 1970 and now proud owner of my first ever 'half-century'!
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
djewesbury wrote:What on earth has this got to do with the study of insects??DRT wrote:I have not yet seen a bottle that looks like a chicken. Are we sure The claims about the entomology of the name are not just urban myth?
Honestly, come on team, I feel like the Head Prefect here. Let's sharpen it up.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=8896&start=100#p81998]Here[/url] PhilW wrote:Inspired by your zeal, I know have my bottle sitting on:
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Deflecting from your own crimes?DRT wrote:[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=8896&start=100#p81998]Here[/url] PhilW wrote:Inspired by your zeal, I know have my bottle sitting on:
Daniel J.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
No. Just being an honest citizen and reporting crime to the authorities when I see it.djewesbury wrote:Deflecting from your own crimes?DRT wrote:[url=http://www.theportforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=8896&start=100#p81998]Here[/url] PhilW wrote:Inspired by your zeal, I know have my bottle sitting on:
"The first duty of Port is to be red"
Ernest H. Cockburn
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
That's good. If everyone grasses everyone else the school will run just fine.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
The BBC, in an article entitled Hiding currency in the Dark Wallet:

I suspect that it would not be productive to contact the original author.

I suspect that it would not be productive to contact the original author.
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
TautologyDRT wrote:the TRPF
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Re: Apostrophe crimes
Hmm...I missed this. I didn’t realise we were moving on from apostrophe crimes to typing errors!!djewesbury wrote:Sorry. I left this as long as I could.
But there it still is.
Here, Jacob created a thread entitled
"Oporto and the Duoro"
But anyway, I plead not guilty on the basis that Duoro, whilst unconventional, is a legitimate alternative spelling:
Richard Shannon, in [url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=3zs7AQAAMAAJ&dq=duoro&pg=PP1#v=onepage&q&f=false]A Practical Treatise on Brewing, Distilling, and Rectification &c. &c.[/url], wrote:By the law of the general company of the Alto Duoro it is expressly provided that if the sambucus fructus in umbella nigro, C. B. P. or the alder tree is found in or about a vineyard the penalty of forty shillings shall be incurred:--and if any of the berries or expressed juice (which they term baga) is found or discovered in any lodge or repository of wine besides the confiscation of all the wines of the said lodge to the company the owner or proprietor is liable to be imprisoned at the mercy of the king