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DeSantis’ Memos versus DeSantis’s Memos

Guess which spelling drives me nuts

Barry Lyons
3 min readAug 19, 2023

It’s generally the case that punctuation rules tend to be applied across the board. Here’s a common rule: “Start a sentence with a capital letter.” Everyone knows this rule. There is no controversy involved when beginning a sentence with a capital letter — unless you’re bell hooks, which only goes to show there can be exceptions to almost anything.

But for our purposes here, there’s a simple reality about English: There are twenty-six letters in the alphabet, and if you want to denote the possessive case when a word is in the singular case (note the plural: “the kittens’ toys”), you add an apostrophe and an s: Harrison’s guitar, Lennon’s harmonica, McCartney’s bass, Starr’s drums, and so on for all the other letters in the alphabet — except for…s? Why is s exempted from this rule as is so often the case with many (but not all) publications? To wit:

DeSantis’ Disney chief suggests ethics commission “weaponized” memo

DeSantis’ appointees ask judge to rule against Disney without need for trial

Some people will argue that the dropped s is done to avoid an issue with sibilance. Really? I’m supposed to keep track of how a word sounds when deciding whether or not to use an apostrophe s? This is madness. If an apostrophe s

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Barry Lyons
Barry Lyons

Written by Barry Lyons

Lives in New York City, owns too many books and CDs. But then again, there's no such thing as "too many" books and CDs.

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