Twin's vs. Twins' Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Contributor's Guide to English Language LearnersIf twins are always plural, how do I refer to a single twin, or how do we count twins?Possessive and whoHow does the possessive apostrophe work in “it's”?“Consumers' wants” vs “Consumer wants”Is it ok to say “Improved the RBT's deletion operation's implementation”?How to use “verb” with “who”?“What is funny in people being injured?” vs “What is funny in peoples' being injured?”How (much/many) (note/notes) did you take?

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Twin's vs. Twins'



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)
Contributor's Guide to English Language LearnersIf twins are always plural, how do I refer to a single twin, or how do we count twins?Possessive and whoHow does the possessive apostrophe work in “it's”?“Consumers' wants” vs “Consumer wants”Is it ok to say “Improved the RBT's deletion operation's implementation”?How to use “verb” with “who”?“What is funny in people being injured?” vs “What is funny in peoples' being injured?”How (much/many) (note/notes) did you take?



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















Question regarding the use of apostrophe/ownership in the case of twins.



Noun: The Night Sisters (who constitute a twin object).



Sentence: Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters passing.



Would this be:



  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sister's passing.

  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.









share|improve this question









New contributor




MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    So, twins is really irrelevant, right?

    – Lambie
    1 hour ago

















1















Question regarding the use of apostrophe/ownership in the case of twins.



Noun: The Night Sisters (who constitute a twin object).



Sentence: Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters passing.



Would this be:



  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sister's passing.

  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.









share|improve this question









New contributor




MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 1





    So, twins is really irrelevant, right?

    – Lambie
    1 hour ago













1












1








1








Question regarding the use of apostrophe/ownership in the case of twins.



Noun: The Night Sisters (who constitute a twin object).



Sentence: Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters passing.



Would this be:



  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sister's passing.

  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.









share|improve this question









New contributor




MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Question regarding the use of apostrophe/ownership in the case of twins.



Noun: The Night Sisters (who constitute a twin object).



Sentence: Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters passing.



Would this be:



  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sister's passing.

  • Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.






possessives grammatical-number apostrophe






share|improve this question









New contributor




MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







MTilda101













New contributor




MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 3 hours ago









MTilda101MTilda101

83




83




New contributor




MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






MTilda101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 1





    So, twins is really irrelevant, right?

    – Lambie
    1 hour ago












  • 1





    So, twins is really irrelevant, right?

    – Lambie
    1 hour ago







1




1





So, twins is really irrelevant, right?

– Lambie
1 hour ago





So, twins is really irrelevant, right?

– Lambie
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














"The Night Sisters" is a plural noun. Therefore the possessive form is "The Night Sisters'", adding just an apostrophe. The proper form of thre example sentence is




Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.




Similarly with other plural nouns:




I greatly enjoyed the Bermuda Islands' sunny beaches.




"the Bermuda Islands" is a plural noun




Pages run the Senators' errands.




"Senators" is a plural noun.



Note that this rule applies to all plural nouns. There is not a special rule for twins, but twins will often be referred to in the plural.



However, a singular noun that happens to end in the letter s does not follow this rule (Strunk and White, The Elements of Style, Rule 1: Form the possessive singular of nouns with 's.")




  • I enjoyed reading Charles's books.


  • The Shores's menu is quite extensive.

  • The actress's performance drew loud applause.

  • Chess's rules are more complex than those of the game Go.



Many native speakers ignore this rule, but in my view this is a mistake.



Often the possessive form can be avoided by rewriting. For example "The rules of chess" rather than "Chess's rules". Sometimes this improves the flow of the sentence.



To clarify the title question: A "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. The term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such. ("twins" can also mean a larger grouping of people who are twins, either in sets or not.) Thus




The twin's clothing




means the clothing of one person, who happens to be a twin, while




The twins' clothing




mean the clothing associated with a set of twins, or possibly with several sets. Given how easily these forms can be confused, if the distinction is important, the sentence should be rewritten for clarity, probably by avoiding the direct possessive. Thus:




Fred and John are twins. Fred's clothing is mostly red and white, while John's is blue and white.




But




Jane and Sally are twins. Their clothing is largely green and yellow.







share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Much appreciated, David! Either I did my homework before, or I guessed the usage correctly; for in the two spots I had it written, I did use it as the Night Sisters'. Alas, I often question the validity of my own mind, and after some halfhearted online searching, couldn't find any relative examples. :D

    – MTilda101
    2 hours ago












  • Because of the title of the question, I would recommend adding to this good answer the fact that the correct possessive for one pair of twins would be "twin's", as in: "She is the twin's mother". Of course, if you were talking about multiple pairs of twins, it would be "twins'", as in: "Both pairs of twins have the same mother, and she is the twins' mother."

    – Ben Hocking
    58 mins ago











  • @ Ben Hocking that would be incorrect. a "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. the term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such.

    – David Siegel
    39 mins ago











  • @DavidSiegel — in thinking about it more, I agree you are correct, which just underscores the importance of mentioning it explicitly. ;)

    – Ben Hocking
    34 mins ago











  • @Ben Hocking Thank you. I have added a clarification to the answer.

    – David Siegel
    29 mins ago











Your Answer








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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














"The Night Sisters" is a plural noun. Therefore the possessive form is "The Night Sisters'", adding just an apostrophe. The proper form of thre example sentence is




Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.




Similarly with other plural nouns:




I greatly enjoyed the Bermuda Islands' sunny beaches.




"the Bermuda Islands" is a plural noun




Pages run the Senators' errands.




"Senators" is a plural noun.



Note that this rule applies to all plural nouns. There is not a special rule for twins, but twins will often be referred to in the plural.



However, a singular noun that happens to end in the letter s does not follow this rule (Strunk and White, The Elements of Style, Rule 1: Form the possessive singular of nouns with 's.")




  • I enjoyed reading Charles's books.


  • The Shores's menu is quite extensive.

  • The actress's performance drew loud applause.

  • Chess's rules are more complex than those of the game Go.



Many native speakers ignore this rule, but in my view this is a mistake.



Often the possessive form can be avoided by rewriting. For example "The rules of chess" rather than "Chess's rules". Sometimes this improves the flow of the sentence.



To clarify the title question: A "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. The term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such. ("twins" can also mean a larger grouping of people who are twins, either in sets or not.) Thus




The twin's clothing




means the clothing of one person, who happens to be a twin, while




The twins' clothing




mean the clothing associated with a set of twins, or possibly with several sets. Given how easily these forms can be confused, if the distinction is important, the sentence should be rewritten for clarity, probably by avoiding the direct possessive. Thus:




Fred and John are twins. Fred's clothing is mostly red and white, while John's is blue and white.




But




Jane and Sally are twins. Their clothing is largely green and yellow.







share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Much appreciated, David! Either I did my homework before, or I guessed the usage correctly; for in the two spots I had it written, I did use it as the Night Sisters'. Alas, I often question the validity of my own mind, and after some halfhearted online searching, couldn't find any relative examples. :D

    – MTilda101
    2 hours ago












  • Because of the title of the question, I would recommend adding to this good answer the fact that the correct possessive for one pair of twins would be "twin's", as in: "She is the twin's mother". Of course, if you were talking about multiple pairs of twins, it would be "twins'", as in: "Both pairs of twins have the same mother, and she is the twins' mother."

    – Ben Hocking
    58 mins ago











  • @ Ben Hocking that would be incorrect. a "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. the term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such.

    – David Siegel
    39 mins ago











  • @DavidSiegel — in thinking about it more, I agree you are correct, which just underscores the importance of mentioning it explicitly. ;)

    – Ben Hocking
    34 mins ago











  • @Ben Hocking Thank you. I have added a clarification to the answer.

    – David Siegel
    29 mins ago















3














"The Night Sisters" is a plural noun. Therefore the possessive form is "The Night Sisters'", adding just an apostrophe. The proper form of thre example sentence is




Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.




Similarly with other plural nouns:




I greatly enjoyed the Bermuda Islands' sunny beaches.




"the Bermuda Islands" is a plural noun




Pages run the Senators' errands.




"Senators" is a plural noun.



Note that this rule applies to all plural nouns. There is not a special rule for twins, but twins will often be referred to in the plural.



However, a singular noun that happens to end in the letter s does not follow this rule (Strunk and White, The Elements of Style, Rule 1: Form the possessive singular of nouns with 's.")




  • I enjoyed reading Charles's books.


  • The Shores's menu is quite extensive.

  • The actress's performance drew loud applause.

  • Chess's rules are more complex than those of the game Go.



Many native speakers ignore this rule, but in my view this is a mistake.



Often the possessive form can be avoided by rewriting. For example "The rules of chess" rather than "Chess's rules". Sometimes this improves the flow of the sentence.



To clarify the title question: A "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. The term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such. ("twins" can also mean a larger grouping of people who are twins, either in sets or not.) Thus




The twin's clothing




means the clothing of one person, who happens to be a twin, while




The twins' clothing




mean the clothing associated with a set of twins, or possibly with several sets. Given how easily these forms can be confused, if the distinction is important, the sentence should be rewritten for clarity, probably by avoiding the direct possessive. Thus:




Fred and John are twins. Fred's clothing is mostly red and white, while John's is blue and white.




But




Jane and Sally are twins. Their clothing is largely green and yellow.







share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Much appreciated, David! Either I did my homework before, or I guessed the usage correctly; for in the two spots I had it written, I did use it as the Night Sisters'. Alas, I often question the validity of my own mind, and after some halfhearted online searching, couldn't find any relative examples. :D

    – MTilda101
    2 hours ago












  • Because of the title of the question, I would recommend adding to this good answer the fact that the correct possessive for one pair of twins would be "twin's", as in: "She is the twin's mother". Of course, if you were talking about multiple pairs of twins, it would be "twins'", as in: "Both pairs of twins have the same mother, and she is the twins' mother."

    – Ben Hocking
    58 mins ago











  • @ Ben Hocking that would be incorrect. a "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. the term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such.

    – David Siegel
    39 mins ago











  • @DavidSiegel — in thinking about it more, I agree you are correct, which just underscores the importance of mentioning it explicitly. ;)

    – Ben Hocking
    34 mins ago











  • @Ben Hocking Thank you. I have added a clarification to the answer.

    – David Siegel
    29 mins ago













3












3








3







"The Night Sisters" is a plural noun. Therefore the possessive form is "The Night Sisters'", adding just an apostrophe. The proper form of thre example sentence is




Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.




Similarly with other plural nouns:




I greatly enjoyed the Bermuda Islands' sunny beaches.




"the Bermuda Islands" is a plural noun




Pages run the Senators' errands.




"Senators" is a plural noun.



Note that this rule applies to all plural nouns. There is not a special rule for twins, but twins will often be referred to in the plural.



However, a singular noun that happens to end in the letter s does not follow this rule (Strunk and White, The Elements of Style, Rule 1: Form the possessive singular of nouns with 's.")




  • I enjoyed reading Charles's books.


  • The Shores's menu is quite extensive.

  • The actress's performance drew loud applause.

  • Chess's rules are more complex than those of the game Go.



Many native speakers ignore this rule, but in my view this is a mistake.



Often the possessive form can be avoided by rewriting. For example "The rules of chess" rather than "Chess's rules". Sometimes this improves the flow of the sentence.



To clarify the title question: A "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. The term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such. ("twins" can also mean a larger grouping of people who are twins, either in sets or not.) Thus




The twin's clothing




means the clothing of one person, who happens to be a twin, while




The twins' clothing




mean the clothing associated with a set of twins, or possibly with several sets. Given how easily these forms can be confused, if the distinction is important, the sentence should be rewritten for clarity, probably by avoiding the direct possessive. Thus:




Fred and John are twins. Fred's clothing is mostly red and white, while John's is blue and white.




But




Jane and Sally are twins. Their clothing is largely green and yellow.







share|improve this answer















"The Night Sisters" is a plural noun. Therefore the possessive form is "The Night Sisters'", adding just an apostrophe. The proper form of thre example sentence is




Mary tended John throughout the Night Sisters' passing.




Similarly with other plural nouns:




I greatly enjoyed the Bermuda Islands' sunny beaches.




"the Bermuda Islands" is a plural noun




Pages run the Senators' errands.




"Senators" is a plural noun.



Note that this rule applies to all plural nouns. There is not a special rule for twins, but twins will often be referred to in the plural.



However, a singular noun that happens to end in the letter s does not follow this rule (Strunk and White, The Elements of Style, Rule 1: Form the possessive singular of nouns with 's.")




  • I enjoyed reading Charles's books.


  • The Shores's menu is quite extensive.

  • The actress's performance drew loud applause.

  • Chess's rules are more complex than those of the game Go.



Many native speakers ignore this rule, but in my view this is a mistake.



Often the possessive form can be avoided by rewriting. For example "The rules of chess" rather than "Chess's rules". Sometimes this improves the flow of the sentence.



To clarify the title question: A "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. The term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such. ("twins" can also mean a larger grouping of people who are twins, either in sets or not.) Thus




The twin's clothing




means the clothing of one person, who happens to be a twin, while




The twins' clothing




mean the clothing associated with a set of twins, or possibly with several sets. Given how easily these forms can be confused, if the distinction is important, the sentence should be rewritten for clarity, probably by avoiding the direct possessive. Thus:




Fred and John are twins. Fred's clothing is mostly red and white, while John's is blue and white.




But




Jane and Sally are twins. Their clothing is largely green and yellow.








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 30 mins ago

























answered 2 hours ago









David SiegelDavid Siegel

2,819215




2,819215







  • 1





    Much appreciated, David! Either I did my homework before, or I guessed the usage correctly; for in the two spots I had it written, I did use it as the Night Sisters'. Alas, I often question the validity of my own mind, and after some halfhearted online searching, couldn't find any relative examples. :D

    – MTilda101
    2 hours ago












  • Because of the title of the question, I would recommend adding to this good answer the fact that the correct possessive for one pair of twins would be "twin's", as in: "She is the twin's mother". Of course, if you were talking about multiple pairs of twins, it would be "twins'", as in: "Both pairs of twins have the same mother, and she is the twins' mother."

    – Ben Hocking
    58 mins ago











  • @ Ben Hocking that would be incorrect. a "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. the term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such.

    – David Siegel
    39 mins ago











  • @DavidSiegel — in thinking about it more, I agree you are correct, which just underscores the importance of mentioning it explicitly. ;)

    – Ben Hocking
    34 mins ago











  • @Ben Hocking Thank you. I have added a clarification to the answer.

    – David Siegel
    29 mins ago












  • 1





    Much appreciated, David! Either I did my homework before, or I guessed the usage correctly; for in the two spots I had it written, I did use it as the Night Sisters'. Alas, I often question the validity of my own mind, and after some halfhearted online searching, couldn't find any relative examples. :D

    – MTilda101
    2 hours ago












  • Because of the title of the question, I would recommend adding to this good answer the fact that the correct possessive for one pair of twins would be "twin's", as in: "She is the twin's mother". Of course, if you were talking about multiple pairs of twins, it would be "twins'", as in: "Both pairs of twins have the same mother, and she is the twins' mother."

    – Ben Hocking
    58 mins ago











  • @ Ben Hocking that would be incorrect. a "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. the term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such.

    – David Siegel
    39 mins ago











  • @DavidSiegel — in thinking about it more, I agree you are correct, which just underscores the importance of mentioning it explicitly. ;)

    – Ben Hocking
    34 mins ago











  • @Ben Hocking Thank you. I have added a clarification to the answer.

    – David Siegel
    29 mins ago







1




1





Much appreciated, David! Either I did my homework before, or I guessed the usage correctly; for in the two spots I had it written, I did use it as the Night Sisters'. Alas, I often question the validity of my own mind, and after some halfhearted online searching, couldn't find any relative examples. :D

– MTilda101
2 hours ago






Much appreciated, David! Either I did my homework before, or I guessed the usage correctly; for in the two spots I had it written, I did use it as the Night Sisters'. Alas, I often question the validity of my own mind, and after some halfhearted online searching, couldn't find any relative examples. :D

– MTilda101
2 hours ago














Because of the title of the question, I would recommend adding to this good answer the fact that the correct possessive for one pair of twins would be "twin's", as in: "She is the twin's mother". Of course, if you were talking about multiple pairs of twins, it would be "twins'", as in: "Both pairs of twins have the same mother, and she is the twins' mother."

– Ben Hocking
58 mins ago





Because of the title of the question, I would recommend adding to this good answer the fact that the correct possessive for one pair of twins would be "twin's", as in: "She is the twin's mother". Of course, if you were talking about multiple pairs of twins, it would be "twins'", as in: "Both pairs of twins have the same mother, and she is the twins' mother."

– Ben Hocking
58 mins ago













@ Ben Hocking that would be incorrect. a "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. the term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such.

– David Siegel
39 mins ago





@ Ben Hocking that would be incorrect. a "twin" is a single person who is one of a pair or set of twins. the term for a set is 'twins" or "a pair of twins", which is plural, and treated as such.

– David Siegel
39 mins ago













@DavidSiegel — in thinking about it more, I agree you are correct, which just underscores the importance of mentioning it explicitly. ;)

– Ben Hocking
34 mins ago





@DavidSiegel — in thinking about it more, I agree you are correct, which just underscores the importance of mentioning it explicitly. ;)

– Ben Hocking
34 mins ago













@Ben Hocking Thank you. I have added a clarification to the answer.

– David Siegel
29 mins ago





@Ben Hocking Thank you. I have added a clarification to the answer.

– David Siegel
29 mins ago










MTilda101 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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Valle di Casies Indice Geografia fisica | Origini del nome | Storia | Società | Amministrazione | Sport | Note | Bibliografia | Voci correlate | Altri progetti | Collegamenti esterni | Menu di navigazione46°46′N 12°11′E / 46.766667°N 12.183333°E46.766667; 12.183333 (Valle di Casies)46°46′N 12°11′E / 46.766667°N 12.183333°E46.766667; 12.183333 (Valle di Casies)Sito istituzionaleAstat Censimento della popolazione 2011 - Determinazione della consistenza dei tre gruppi linguistici della Provincia Autonoma di Bolzano-Alto Adige - giugno 2012Numeri e fattiValle di CasiesDato IstatTabella dei gradi/giorno dei Comuni italiani raggruppati per Regione e Provincia26 agosto 1993, n. 412Heraldry of the World: GsiesStatistiche I.StatValCasies.comWikimedia CommonsWikimedia CommonsValle di CasiesSito ufficialeValle di CasiesMM14870458910042978-6