Monday, September 17, 2007

Are you an idiot?

If so, then this might come in handy.


Itsits


via

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

This is not as easy to remember as the individual would have you believe. Watch. This is Mike's watch. The apostrophe denotes possession. So, the cat hurt it's feet" to mean the cat owns his own feet. So if you have trouble remembering that this is the one exception to an apostrophe showing possession then you are all right, otherwise you will still get it wrong.

Anonymous said...

The word "its" signifies possession, and needs no apostrophe. (Nor do these words need one: yours, his, hers, theirs, and ours.)

Anonymous said...

he needs to do one for "your" vs. "you're"

Anonymous said...

I do NOT know why this stuff is so difficult for people to grasp. It's always boggled my mind.

Anonymous said...

WOW christiaan, mine two.

Panday said...

Do another one for "their", "there", and "they're".

Anonymous said...

how about one for the difference between "lose" and "loose"? that one spelling mistake ALWAYS drives me batty, and u see it everywhere these days, even on closed captioning, spotted it a couple times now. now, i can understand how they might think you need the double o because of the "oooo" sound, but do you spell loser with 2 o's? no, you don't.