May I separate a possessive determiner and its noun with a comma in a sentence?
Example: Eva's sister, Jackie's, Iphone.
Yes they need to be separated as they tend to fight when left unattended.
The sister of Eva
the iphone of Jackie
NO!
No comma after 'Jackie's', the phone belongs to her.
Eva's sister, Jackie's Iphone.
It doesn't often happen, but in this case I disagree with Froggy. Either keep your original punctuation, OR (better) use no commas at all. Using only one doesn't work.
"Eva's sister Jackie's I-phone". Nobody will think the phone is Eva's sister.
- Please correct the sentence? I seriously don't want to buy any phone now. As i have started going to office full time, i realize how hard it is to earn money so now i don't like wasting money on such things. Its better to save money but whenever i will new phone it will an iphone for sure
- My aunt and uncle have the same Apple ID. I think they need separate ones, do they? I've told them to get separate ones in the event that they need to back up their phones or get new ones. Don't they need separate ones? They hardly back up their phones or hook up their iPhones to the computer.
- Is this german sentence correct? Danach bin ich mit meiner Freundin einkaufen gegangen und es hat Spass gemacht, weil die Geschafte toll fur Leute in meinem Alter sind. P.S I know there should be umlauts and an esstet in this but I don't know how to get them on iPhone.
- Is there ever an instance when the first letter of a sentence IS NOT capitalized? In every instance of writing, it seems to be a known fact that the first letter of a sentence is always capitalized, including sentences that start with eBay or iPhone. Is there ever an instance that the first letter of a sentence is left lowercase, like for a quote or something?