An Apostrophe to the Apostrophe by Griselda Heppel
A couple of
months ago I set out to do a grammar grouse blog, but Jacob Rees-Mogg got in the way (let’s face it, he does that, a lot). So now, in the dark days of
November, it seems a good moment to try again… and this time it’s Jeremy Vine
who’s got me going. Not because I disagree with him. On the contrary, he put
out a tweet recently that was music to my ears (or eyes? Eek, that doesn’t work
either), all about our dear old friend, the apostrophe:
Grammar question. I have friends whose
surname is Hobbs. I went to a function celebrating their anniversary. I have
just emailed a friend I ran into there, and said it was "great to see you
again at the Hobbses' party." Am I exactly correct in the way I wrote
their surname?
YES, I replied, yes yes yes. Scrolling down,
I realised I was pretty much the only one out of hundreds of replies. Everyone
else was absolutely certain it should be the Hobbs’ or the Hobb’s party. So a
party given either by a couple called Mr and Mrs Hobb, or a thing/person called a Hobb
(short for a hobbit? Yes that, was suggested too).
I know, I should get out more. So perhaps
should Jeremy Vine. That way perhaps we’d both be better at Keeping up with the
Joneses. Oh sorry, should that be, Keeping Up with the Jones? What is a Jone,
then? If we don’t allow names ending in ‘s’ to have their own plural form, the
meaning isn’t clear. The same goes for the possessive apostrophe, whether
singular or plural; its function is to show that something either belongs to somebody, or is named after them. People in Britain have had no trouble understanding this for the last few centuries; now, apparently, we can't cope anymore and councils all over the country have done away with the apostrophe altogether. Five years ago, the ire of local residents armed with marker
pens forced Cambridge City Council to cave in over its decision to abolish apostrophes from street signs. (It was thought that apostrophes can confuse emergency services – a calumny hotly denied by the emergency
services themselves. Just because you’re a police/fire officer or paramedic doesn’t
mean you didn’t go to school.)
Grammar and the use of English change over
the years, I know. But speech patterns don’t. Have you tried saying, ‘this is Jane
Morris book’? Or ‘the Harris are coming to tea’? You can’t. The person you’re talking
to will hear ‘this is Jane Morey’s book’ and ‘the Harrys (Prince and Potter?) are coming to tea.’ So
why have one rule for the spoken word – which at least makes the meaning clear –
and a different one for when the word is written down?
Alas, judging by these signs, the battle is pretty much lost, except for the odd London underground station still holding strong.
Alas, judging by these signs, the battle is pretty much lost, except for the odd London underground station still holding strong.
And I bet everyone going for treatment at one of
London's most famous hospitals will refer to it as St Thomas's, whatever it may
call itself.
Right, that was arguably my most nerdish post
ever. Still, if you think I’m overreacting, here’s a glorious recent tweet from
that Giant of the Twittery and Literary world, Philip Ardagh, replying to a
sentence that read, 'Anyone else keep seeing a dog stood by the bush outside
the tent? #GBBO’:
‘A dog STOOD’? ‘STOOD’?! It should be: ‘Anyone
else keep seeing a dog STANDING by the bush…’ you bunch of halfwits. You should
be HORSE-WHIPPED, I say. HORSEWHIPPED. Sob.’
Wildly out of proportion but Philip, I know
what you mean.
Find out more about Griselda Heppel here:
and her children's books:
Ante's Inferno
and
The Tragickall History of Henry Fowst
Ante's Inferno
and
The Tragickall History of Henry Fowst
Comments
1. Jeremy Vine isn't worth a fraction of the money they pay him. Every evening his crass, inept chairing of Eggheads has my wife and I yelling imprecations which are totally inappropriate in a respectable middle-class household.
2. It seems to (probably misguided) moi that 'Hobbses'' is probably an attempt to convey a purely aural version of the written construction 'Hobbs's'. They're called Hobbs, not Hobbse.
3. And your final words compel me to remind everyone of one of the many famous quips we owe to Groucho Marx: 'You scoundrel! I'd horsewhip you if I had a horse'.
(By the way he and his wife have called their son 'Harris' and it didn't strike me until reading this post that they might have the same sort of problem!)