Scooby wrote:
I know that this is an Irish language forum but perhaps you will give me some latitude given my contributions here. I have a question about English and since we have so many linguists here...
Okay, so the story is that I'm doing some proofreading and I have come across some article headings like Careers Evening / Irish Senior Schools Championship and the likes of "they participated in the water skills award programme".
My question is - should I have an apostrophe before the s in the underlined words, in some or all cases above?
Also, if you look at the word 'programme' above, what is the rule about the full stop? Should it precede the inverted commas? I believe there is a difference between American and English usage, and in English usage it may depend on whether the quotation stands alone or is part of a longer sentence.
...or maybe not!
Thanks in advance.
My inclination would be to not use an apostrophe, as these words are being used as adjectives rather than as possessives.
I would, however, put a hyphen in "water-skills."
In current standard U.S. usage, punctuation always goes inside of quotation marks. That hasn't always been the case, however, and I don't know how our usage may differ from British usage in that regard.
Redwolf