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  • Is the possessive of one spelled ones or ones?
    Indefinite pronouns like one and somebody: one's, somebody's The possessive of the pronoun one is spelled one's There are many types of pronouns Unfortunately, people explaining the mnemonic for remembering the spelling of its sometimes over-simplify and say something like "it doesn't have an apostrophe because it's a pronoun, like his or her"
  • Loved ones or ones - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Try changing loved one(s) for a different word, like child(ren), and you’ll see that their does not affect this at all “Their child’s complaints” and “their children’s complaints” are both equally correct, depending on whether ‘they’ have one or more several mithering kids, just like both “His child’s complaints” and “His children’s complaints” are both correct
  • (s) or s at the end of a word to denote one or many
    addendum: A compromise outside confines of plain-text is to combine both, "( s)", but with the parentheses shrunk slightly; this would be only marginally longer than " s" (but shorter than "(s)") and convey more explicit+accurate meaning than either of the other options by its respective self
  • pronouns - Whats the difference between ones, the ones, those . . .
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • meaning - What is the difference between S and S? - English Language . . .
    Both express possession, of course We use 's with singular nouns For example, "my son's toys" will be "the toys that belong to my son"
  • Catch ones breath vs Ones breath caught [closed]
    As aparente001 points out in a comment above, the expressions tend to mean two very different things: "to catch one's breath" is a well-established idiom whose primary meaning is "to recover from exertion" (the implication being that one was "out of breath" and is now in the process of regaining one's normal breathing pattern), while "one's breath caught" means that one's normal breathing was
  • Whats the origin of the idiom to cut your teeth on something?
    cut one's teeth on: to do at the beginning of one's education, career, etc , or in one's youth: The hunter boasted of having cut his teeth on tigers It's a metaphoric reference to when a baby's teeth first appear They grow (cut) through the gums - often painfully, which also gives us the figurative usage teething troubles
  • Which is correct: rack my brain or wrack my brain?
    The verb meaning "to ruin or wreck" (originally of ships) is recorded from 1560s, from earlier intrans sense "to be shipwrecked" (late 15c ) Often confused in this sense since 16c with rack (1) in the verb sense of "to torture on the rack;" to wrack one's brains is thus erroneous The PhraseFinder agrees that the phrase is rack your brains
  • For ones own good Vs In ones best interest
    We speak about "acting in one's best interest" "For your own good" is more likely to be used if you were physically giving someone something - for example, if you gave someone some medication that they didn't want The medicine itself is for their good, although you might say that the act of giving it to them was in their interest
  • Whats the correct way of saying that one is pursuing a degree?
    Agree with @Mick re "study for a degree" rather than "study a degree" The latter doesn't make sense in any English I've ever heard





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