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P.S.A.
For the record -
"Your" is possessive.
Your hat, your family, your car.
"You're" is a contraction of "you are".
You're the right person for the job.
"There" is used for location (among other things).
Your keys are right there on the table.
"Their" is possessive.
Their family is huge.
"They're" is a contraction of "they are".
They're waiting for you in your office.
"Alot" is not a word.
Most of the time it's used for "a lot".
"It's" is a contraction of "it is".
It's almost quitting time.
"Its" is possessive.
The dog buried its bone.
Apostrophes have two uses.
1. Contractions
It's (it is) time to go home.
2. Possession
Tim's dog (the dog belonging to Tim) is a lab-mix.
If English is not your first language, then I salute you for learning it.
It is a difficult mess to learn.
If English is your first language, then please do everyone a favor and make
an attempt to use it properly.
Sorry - this is one of my pet-peeves.
I'm ready for the expected rebuttals.
Let the flames begin!
~TA~
"Peter Dow" <petercdow@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:mailman.7190.1378406578.9013.midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx...
Last night I saw this post from buzzfeed:
"The difference between knowing you're sh*t and knowing your sh*t."
And then today I saw two examples using your when it should've been
you're. Made /me/ laugh anyway.
--
*Peter Dow* /
Dow Software Services, Inc.
909 793-9050
petercdow@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:petercdow@xxxxxxxxx>
pdow@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx <mailto:pdow@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>/
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