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Master the rules that distinguish ownership from quantity — one of the most tested skills on the ACT.
The apostrophe is one of the youngest punctuation marks in the English language, and its journey from a simple contraction marker to a full-fledged signal of possession has created centuries of confusion. Understanding why the apostrophe exists — and how it evolved — helps explain the rules the ACT tests today. Early English had no apostrophe at all; writers relied on word endings and context to show who owned what. As the language shed its Old English inflections, printers and grammarians introduced the apostrophe to fill the gap, but they never fully agreed on the rules. That historical messiness is exactly why the ACT devotes so many questions to apostrophe usage: the test wants to see whether you can apply consistent, modern conventions.
The core question this lesson addresses is deceptively simple: when do you add an apostrophe, and when do you just add an 's'? Getting this wrong is one of the most common errors on the ACT English section, so let's break it down completely.
Before tackling ACT questions, you need to internalize three distinct categories that students frequently confuse. A plural noun simply means "more than one" and almost never requires an apostrophe. A possessive noun shows ownership or a close relationship (like "the dog's bone") and always requires an apostrophe. A contraction shortens two words into one (like "it's" for "it is") and also uses an apostrophe, but for a completely different reason. The ACT tests whether you can distinguish among all three.
This flowchart captures the entire decision process you should run mentally during the ACT. The left branch handles all possessive situations: singular owners always get 's, while plural owners that already end in -s get just an apostrophe after the s. Irregular plurals like "children" or "women" behave like singular nouns and take 's. The right branch reminds you that plain plurals never need an apostrophe — a mistake sometimes called the grocer's apostrophe because it shows up on signs like "Apple's for Sale."
When you see a noun ending in -s (with or without an apostrophe) underlined on the ACT, run through these three diagnostic questions in order. This systematic approach eliminates guesswork and works every time.
Read the sentence and ask: does this noun possess, own, or have a close relationship with something that follows it? If "the team's victory" means the victory belonging to the team, you need an apostrophe. If "the teams competed," no ownership is expressed — the teams simply did something — so you just need a plain plural. This first question alone will solve about half of all apostrophe questions on the ACT.
Once you've confirmed ownership, determine whether there is one owner (singular possessive) or multiple owners (plural possessive). Context clues in the sentence will guide you. "The athlete's record" means one athlete, while "the athletes' records" means several. The placement of the apostrophe relative to the s changes the entire meaning of the sentence.
Some apostrophe questions disguise contractions as possessives or vice versa. The classic trap involves its/it's, their/they're/there, your/you're, and whose/who's. Here's the universal test: try expanding the contraction. If "it's" can be replaced with "it is" or "it has" and the sentence still makes sense, the apostrophe is correct. If not, you need the possessive form "its." This substitution trick is fast and reliable on test day.
| Scenario | Rule | Correct Example | Common Mistake |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular possessive | Add 's to the singular noun | the school's policy | the schools policy ✗ |
| Singular ending in -s | Add 's (ACT standard) | Charles's hat | Charles' hat (not wrong everywhere, but 's is safest on the ACT) |
| Regular plural possessive | Make plural first, then add ' | the schools' policies | the school's policies ✗ (implies one school) |
| Irregular plural possessive | Add 's to the irregular plural | the men's room | the mens' room ✗ |
| Plain plural | Just add -s or -es — no apostrophe | The Johnsons arrived. | The Johnson's arrived. ✗ |
| its vs. it's | it's = it is; its = possessive | The dog wagged its tail. | The dog wagged it's tail. ✗ |
Let's walk through an ACT-style passage question step by step. Imagine you see the following sentence in a passage:
scientists (no apostrophe).scientist's because that form implies only one scientist.scientists'. The form scientists's is never correct in standard English.The ACT test-makers are skilled at designing answer choices that exploit common apostrophe mistakes. Knowing these traps in advance gives you a significant edge. The table below catalogs the most frequent pitfalls and provides a quick fix for each one.
| Trap | What It Looks Like | Why It's Wrong | Quick Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grocer's apostrophe | "The company hired new employee's." | No ownership; it's a plain plural. | Remove the apostrophe: "employees." |
| it's / its confusion | "The tree lost it's leaves." | "It's" = "it is." "It is leaves" makes no sense. | Substitute "it is." If it doesn't work, use "its." |
| Singular vs. plural mix-up | "Each student's projects" vs. "Each students' project" | "Each" signals a singular subject. | Check context clues (each, every = singular; many, several = plural). |
| who's / whose confusion | "The author who's book was published…" | "Who's" = "who is." "Who is book" is nonsense. | Substitute "who is." If it fails, use "whose." |
| Family name plurals | "The Smith's are coming to dinner." | No ownership; you're just making the name plural. | Plain plural: "The Smiths are coming." Possessive: "The Smiths' house." |
While the core rules handle most ACT questions, a handful of advanced scenarios appear occasionally. These edge cases can trip up even well-prepared students, so familiarizing yourself with them now gives you a clear advantage.
| Advanced Case | Standard Rule | ACT Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Joint possession | When two people share ownership, only the last name gets 's: "Jack and Jill's project." | Rarely tested, but be ready to recognize the pattern. |
| Separate possession | When two people own different things, both names get 's: "Jack's and Jill's projects." | Context will clarify whether they share or own separately. |
| Compound nouns | Add 's to the last word: "my mother-in-law's recipe," "the editor-in-chief's decision." | The ACT typically tests simpler compound nouns. |
| Double possessive | "A friend of Maria's" — uses both "of" and 's. Acceptable in standard English. | Unlikely to appear as a tested concept, but not incorrect. |
| Gerund possession | "I appreciate your helping" — the possessive "your" precedes the gerund "helping." | Occasionally tested. If a noun/pronoun precedes a gerund, it should be possessive. |
As you move into college-level writing and standardized tests like the SAT, you'll encounter these edge cases more frequently. For the ACT, however, the overwhelming majority of questions test the basic distinction between plural, singular possessive, and plural possessive — plus the contraction/possessive pronoun confusion. Master those four categories and you'll be well prepared for test day.