Website review: Using the apostrophe 1.

gemr97 gemr97 discovered this in Writing 47 reviews since Jan 20, 2008
icon tagswriting, grammar bristol.ac.uk/arts/skills/grammar/grammar_tut...

Thumbs up People who like this website

myfallingleaf
Hesperia
santana81
California
staticpopx
Las Vegas
isagfunk
San Francisco
chillami
Eagle Mountain
JacyTray
Centralia
misstexas1961
Seattle
lupevaldes
Seattle
webgraphic
Sidney
Lyze
Port Coquitlam

StumbleUpon is the best way to discover great web sites, videos, photos, blogs and more - based on your interests. Everything is submitted and rated by the community. Discover, share and review the best of the web!

Thumbs up Reviews of this website

donthaverabies rated 4 months ago
completely unnecessary. how can we expect people who aren't able to memorize a couple of very basic rules to even find the 'on' switch on their computers?
LubesX rated 4 months ago
Writing English properly is indeed a sign of conformity -- for the intelligent. Morons would be those confusing individuals who find grammar beneath them. Most of us are not e e cummings.
djaef rated 4 months ago
Stevedtrm gave this a negative rating and said "Superficial conformity for morons." I disagree. I think knowing how to write correctly is a sign of intelligence and diligence. Nothing to do with conformity if you ask me.
Binks1 rated 5 months ago
Help on the correct use of the english language
dorianrolf rated 5 months ago
I, for one could use the punctuation tips. (!)
demonveen rated 5 months ago
A handful of useful grammar exercises. Please look beyond just the apostrophe questions -- there are 38 categories and I can tell from your comments that you couldn't get a 10 out of 10 on all of them. @stevedtrm -- Grammar difficult not without random trying people what figure out say useful. Besides which conformity is what makes your browser print out a readable page you fucking dipshit.
stevedtrm rated 5 months ago
Superficial conformity for morons.
schmeanel rated 5 months ago
More people should know this... someone mentions 3 as being answered as either a or d (in the reviews of this page section) in the case that you only have one parent - technically speaking I would have to agree but think it's incredibly misleading to refer to just your mom or dad as parent in the context of this sentence considering the possessive nature of "parents" makes the word phonetically identical and quite vague...
This page is not affiliated with bristol.ac.uk.