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Used in the phrase: "Start thinking about your businesses future today."

Thanks a million, I'm stuck!!!!

2006-09-18 10:03:05 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Higher Education (University +)

4 answers

It depends on your purpose, and if business should be plural; for example, if you're using MLA style, it would be businesses' if it's plural; business's if it's singular. Yes, I know that looks odd, but it's correct.

2006-09-18 10:10:07 · answer #1 · answered by Katyana 4 · 0 0

you're desirous to point the possessive case of the noun "enterprise" in user-friendly terms an apostrophe is extra to a be conscious which finally ends up with an s. So for this reason your sentence may well be written as follows: start up thinking approximately your enterprise' destiny today. the only varieties of words that end with an s the place you may write the be conscious and then an 's is that if the be conscious is a appropriate noun with in user-friendly terms one syllable (consisting of Santa Claus's reindeer or Keats's pencils).

2016-10-15 03:32:57 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm not an English Grammar expert, so I would think you'd need to show possession? That would require the apostrophe after the word?

Call up a librarian or a college and speak with an English professor.

2006-09-18 10:06:46 · answer #3 · answered by YRofTexas 6 · 0 0

Business's future if its one business. Businesses' future if you're referring to more than one business. It's the placing of the apostraphe either before or after the letter S.

2006-09-18 10:15:59 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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