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Where Should The Apostrophe Be?

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mrs.chappie | 23:00 Wed 29th Jan 2014 | Arts & Literature
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Sorry for wrong category - don't know where this question should go.

I have been asked to make a 'Good luck in your new home' card. Buyer has asked me to print:

Good luck in your new home, the Campbell's. It doesn't look right. Should I take out the apostrophe?

Thanks in advance for any help, peeps. x
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Leave it out.
Ha! Danny.
Thought it was alliterative! Is he Tom1 or Tom2??
My local council has decided that the apostrophe is too confusing and leave it off such things as street names. e.g St John's Place becomes St Johns Place.lol
Maybe that's because they are not sure themselves, Danny.

That would really irritate me.

(It's not really Tom, elliemay. I was joshing!)
I knew that, Tilly! Just as your name is really Tootsie.
Tilly....fancy becoming an apostrophe placing guerrilla?....☺
Waterstones in Belfast dropped the apostrophe a few years ago.
Tilly....fancy becoming an apostrophe placing guerrilla?....☺

I do indeed, gness.
well, so I did, QM - a pure typo, you understand :-)
I once corrected all the wrongly placed apostrophes on a sign in the toilets in Leicester Hospital.....I had time on my hands....☺
My sister has been known to rub them out on chalkboards outside shops....
I do that too, boxtops.
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I'd prefer to see first names on a card, but using the surname is a good compromise when the sender isn't sure how to spell the family's first names.




They're not called Tilly, Tom and Tootsie the mrs chappie? :-)
Question Author
:o)

I see some weird names these days. I'm sure some of them aren't proper names, they're just made up by splicing two pop stars together.
Earl's Court has got one, Barons Court hasn't. There are reasons, of course, but really you can't expect things to be obvious or logical in English.

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