Not the way I learned to use them on abbreviations, nor the way my bazillion of reports and papers were written (that were all proofed by some tech editor, usually several, along the way). I have always been required to add an apostrophe after various acronyms and abbreviations and am unlikely to change, sorry (old dogs).
p136 of my old Harbrace College Handbook (8th printing, 1977): "Use the apostrophe and s to form the plural of lower-case letters and abbreviations... When needed...use to form the plural of abbreviations, symbols..." It goes on to say either is acceptable for abbreviations and provides examples. This reference would say CD's or CDs is valid.
If the worst thing about me is my grammar I'll die content.
And I thought the cable debates were bad...
Then there is the possessive for people whose last names end in "s".
It was James Levine's Boston Symphony.
Now it is Andris Nelsons' Boston Symphony.
Larry
Here is an example of the most egregious and annoying misuse of the English language - using an adjective as a noun. This one is particularly distasteful and highlights Americans' tendencies toward lazy expression.
Considering your age, you're probably a respected member of the AK community, so you're excused; however, there is no leeway for the "yungens."After 28 years of practicing Anesthesia, I have gotten lazy after my retirement. Yes, my "bad".
AK as in "alta Kucker"
I could take somebody insulting my hearing, my equipment, my setup, my taste, but the apostrophe slur was too much.
It actually isn't Ron. The general rule is that you should use an apostrophe if it avoids confusion. In the olden days before people knew what CDs were, putting an "s" in there as I just did may have made them think it is always called "CDs" so "CD's" was OK to use. Using the general (current) rule of less is more, it is highly recommended that no apostrophe be used. However if such use can create confusion, apostrophe is required yet again. Imagine if a "CDs" process was used to create CDs. See how confusing that is? In this case one would add an apostrophe for plural of CD as to distinguish it from the process called "CDs."Yeeaahh . . . I think "CD's" is a major apostrophe violation.![]()
It actually isn't Ron.
The general rule is that you should use an apostrophe if it avoids confusion. In the olden days before people knew what CDs were, putting an "s" in there as I just did may have made them think it is always called "CDs" so "CD's" was OK to use. Using the general (current) rule of less is more, it is highly recommended that no apostrophe be used. However if such use can create confusion, apostrophe is required yet again. Imagine if a "CDs" process was used to create CDs. See how confusing that is? In this case one would add an apostrophe for plural of CD as to distinguish it from the process called "CDs."
Mind you I am not remotely smart enough or have mastery of English to know all of this. I wrote a technical book in 1990s and asked my publisher (Prentice Hall) how to check my grammar and he recommended Chicago Manual of Style. This is a 100+ year book (gone through countless revisions) that is the bible for writers. I augmented it with Science and Technical Writing. By using these two I was able to get answers to just about every question of this type. The idea is to stick to one established style so that you can defend your writing. Not that there is only one answer for all the gray areas.
Whats the connection to audio anyways???
![]()
![]() | Steve Williams Site Founder | Site Owner | Administrator | ![]() | Ron Resnick Site Owner | Administrator | ![]() | Julian (The Fixer) Website Build | Marketing Managersing |