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plural or possessive
Posted: 06 Oct 2020, 10:53
by Diana Lowery
When referring to the team sport, which is correct? I have seen it used all three ways.
girls basketball
girls' basketball
girl's basketball
Thanks for your help!
Re: plural or possessive
Posted: 06 Oct 2020, 14:56
by Dayodiola
I think 'girls basketball' holds no meaning. But the aspect of either the possession of the basketball is for 'girls' or 'a girl' depends on the sentence.
This is how I determine if a sentence is possessive. The statement must appeal to the usage of 'OF' e.g basketball of the girls could be written as 'girls basketball'.
Re: plural or possessive
Posted: 06 Oct 2020, 16:17
by Diana Lowery
Sorry if I confused you. I am trying to refer to a team sport. "The girls basketball team won." or
"The girls' basketball team won." or "The girl's basketball team won."
Re: plural or possessive
Posted: 06 Oct 2020, 16:25
by Bigwig1973
I'm not an expert by any means, but I think it's fair to say it depends on the context. The apostrophe is used to indicate possession - the basketball team belonging to the girls, not a particular girl, which kind of wants to make me think girls' basketball. On the other hand, the term is so well-known, one wants to not use an apostrophe at all. If it's a particular girl's basketball - like Tom Hank's volleyball named Wilson...I'm trying to think of an alternative - the first thing that comes to mind is the American Legion and their fish fry (they have really good fish and I am hungry and I just tried making battered fried fish at home the other day and it wasn't like theirs

). What else is commonly referred to in the plural form that is also as widely accepted?
Re: plural or possessive
Posted: 06 Oct 2020, 16:35
by Diana Lowery
Well, thanks, now I am hungry for fried fish.