plural or possessive

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Diana Lowery
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plural or possessive

Post 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!
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Dayodiola
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Post 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'.
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Post 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."
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Post 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 :cry:). What else is commonly referred to in the plural form that is also as widely accepted?
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Diana Lowery
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Post by Diana Lowery »

Well, thanks, now I am hungry for fried fish.
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