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Home > Operations > Editorial Support > Distinctive Treatment of Words
Distinctive Treatment of Words
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  • Words and hyphenated phrases that are not nouns but are used as nouns usually form the plural by adding s or es.
  • Ex:  dos and don’ts, ifs and buts
  • The possessive of most singular nouns is formed by adding an apostrophe and an s.  The possessive of plural nouns is formed by adding an apostrophe only.
  • Ex:  a bass’s stripes, puppies’ paws
  • The general rule extends to proper nouns, including names ending in s, x, or z, in both their singular and plural forms, as well as letters and numbers.
  • Ex:  Dickens’s novels, the Lincolns’ marriage, FDR’s legacy, the Williamses’ new house
  • When the singular form of a noun ending in s is the same as the plural, the possessives of both are formed by the addition of an apostrophe only.  The same rule applies when the name of a place, organization, or a publication (or the last element in the name) is a plural form ending in s, even though the entity is singular. 
  • This can change depending on client preference, so check with your Designer before making a change (ex. Capital Blue Cross’).
  • Ex:  politics’ true meaning, the United States’ role in international law, the National Academy of Sciences’ new policy
  • Their and his/her
  • Their will be used instead of his/her; he/she; his/hers; etc., OR use he/him/his.  Alternate between male and female, if desired.
  • If a sentence can be restructured to not include form of his/her, edit it to make it so.
  • Ex:  “Consider where the customer is in his/her buying process” changed to “Consider where the customer is in the buying process.”
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