Does This Sentence Make Sense?
Question by Marie: Does this sentence make sense?
“When a good friend of Arthur’s, Ted Hatchett, is injured at war and then resorts to suicide, Arthur’s thoughts are addled and consumed with grief.”
Does this sentence make sense?
The context is that Arthur’s thoughts are literally all with his deceased friend.
Best answer:
Answer by Oakleydude91
I don’t think the first apostrophe is needed in Auther. It seems the apostrophe is contracting ‘Auther is’ so it’s almost like you are saying ‘Auther is is’. The second apostrophe is correct because Auther is posessing his thought.
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