apostrophe
n.
punctuation mark used to indicate omission of letters or possession; digression in a discourse to someone not present
Apostrophe
The apostrophe ( ’ or ' ) is a
punctuation mark, and sometimes a
diacritic mark, in
languages written in the
Latin alphabet. In
English, it has two main functions: it marks omissions; and it assists in marking the possessives of all nouns and many pronouns. (In strictly limited cases, it is sometimes also allowed to assist in marking plurals, but most authorities are now against such usage; see below.) According to the
OED, the word comes ultimately from
Greek ἡ ἀπόστροφος [προσῳδία] (, the [accent of] "turning away", or elision), through
Latin and
French.
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apostrophe
Noun
1. address to an absent or imaginary person
(hypernym) rhetorical device
2. the mark (') used to indicate the omission of one or more letters from a printed word
(hypernym) punctuation, punctuation mark
(derivation) apostrophize, apostrophise
Apostroph (der)
n.
apostrophe, punctuation mark used to indicate omission of letters or possession
apostrophe (f)
n.
apostrophe, punctuation mark used to indicate omission of letters or possession
apostropher
v.
apostrophize