
Jan 10th, 2005, 09:10 am
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 | Administrator | | Join Date: Jan 8th, 2005
Posts: 254
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Joint Possession Happy Camper,
I did a search and found part of your answer.
When two people jointly possess one thing, you can use one appostrophe: "Tim and Jenny's car" Use apostrophes twice when the people possess things separately: "Tim's and Jenny's cars"
If one word is a possessive adjective, then both words should be possessive, so "It's my and Jenny's car"
but I think "mine and Jenny's car" is wrong...
I'll keep looking for a better explanation...
Last edited by little sage : Jan 12th, 2005 at 08:41 am.
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