Members' is correct as member's would mean that there is only one member (bre) five members of staff have been fired Also, re the correctness or otherwise of your third option, you might want to read this recent thread.
I have come across this problem for many times Five staff have been fired Of the four sentences below, which one is correct
Could members be omitted and just say family help each other instead This sounds pretty unlikely to me in american english Perhaps another member can tell you whether it sounds normal in british english. I'm looking for norwegian terms of endearment commonly used among family members
Instead of there are 6 members in my family, is it natural or grammatical to say my family has 6 members? I'm wondering which sentence sound more native in america, when describing your family Both can be correct but have different use, ie colloquial vs Formal but i want to know which one sounds more native
My mother, two sisters and myself Members list = a list of members, or a list for members Members' list = a list belonging to all members Member's list = a list belonging to one particular member.
I’m wondering how far the grammatical principle of word order seen in “present” stretches “present members” means those who have the membership of the group whereas “members present” means people present at a particular meeting The posterior adjective seems to me to counter the english. Hi all, i've once been told that five staff is bre and is considered wrong in ame
Is there any truth to this