Is the possessive of “one” spelled “ones” or “one's”?












22















I've been confused about this as long as I can remember. Should it be:




One should do ones duty.




or




One should do one's duty.




I'm guessing it should be the latter. But that doesn't sit well with the possessive pronoun 'its'. For example:




It is its own purpose.




vs.




It is it's own purpose.




Here, the former seems clearly correct.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Corresponding question: Why doesn't “its” have an apostrophe?

    – endolith
    May 28 '11 at 6:43
















22















I've been confused about this as long as I can remember. Should it be:




One should do ones duty.




or




One should do one's duty.




I'm guessing it should be the latter. But that doesn't sit well with the possessive pronoun 'its'. For example:




It is its own purpose.




vs.




It is it's own purpose.




Here, the former seems clearly correct.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Corresponding question: Why doesn't “its” have an apostrophe?

    – endolith
    May 28 '11 at 6:43














22












22








22


1






I've been confused about this as long as I can remember. Should it be:




One should do ones duty.




or




One should do one's duty.




I'm guessing it should be the latter. But that doesn't sit well with the possessive pronoun 'its'. For example:




It is its own purpose.




vs.




It is it's own purpose.




Here, the former seems clearly correct.










share|improve this question
















I've been confused about this as long as I can remember. Should it be:




One should do ones duty.




or




One should do one's duty.




I'm guessing it should be the latter. But that doesn't sit well with the possessive pronoun 'its'. For example:




It is its own purpose.




vs.




It is it's own purpose.




Here, the former seems clearly correct.







orthography pronouns possessives apostrophe saxon-genitive






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 29 '16 at 18:17









sumelic

48.5k8114219




48.5k8114219










asked May 21 '11 at 1:20









boehjboehj

4431411




4431411








  • 1





    Corresponding question: Why doesn't “its” have an apostrophe?

    – endolith
    May 28 '11 at 6:43














  • 1





    Corresponding question: Why doesn't “its” have an apostrophe?

    – endolith
    May 28 '11 at 6:43








1




1





Corresponding question: Why doesn't “its” have an apostrophe?

– endolith
May 28 '11 at 6:43





Corresponding question: Why doesn't “its” have an apostrophe?

– endolith
May 28 '11 at 6:43










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















31














The correct answer is one's!



All possessives get an apostrophe, except the standard possessive pronouns and these are:




yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its




Apart of these, always add an apostrophe.






share|improve this answer





















  • 6





    @Bacon Did you see the frightened ones? (Goodbye Blue Sky)

    – Phira
    May 21 '11 at 5:10






  • 1





    @Bacon: And the Great Old Ones are Great Old People, too? :)

    – Phira
    May 21 '11 at 5:21






  • 1





    @Bacon @user9325 - The Young Ones.

    – Karl
    May 21 '11 at 5:37








  • 6





    @Bacon It's not so uncommon. Try these: "Son, would you like the purple ones or the blue ones?" "Wow, (pointing at animals) look at the little ones!" Saying "almost always incorrect" is incorrect.

    – ErikE
    May 21 '11 at 7:30






  • 3





    @endolith - 1) This is English we're talking about; you expected logic? <g> As stated in the answer, there are six "standard" (by which we mean "irregular") pronouns; apart from those, you should add an apostrophe. Try not to think too hard about why those six are different from all the others - you'll only make yourself old before your time. 2) Yes, "the young ones' music makes me angry and gives me a headache" is correct.

    – MT_Head
    Jun 7 '11 at 7:48



















3














Indefinite pronouns like one and somebody: one's, somebody's



The possessive of the pronoun one is spelled one's. There are many types of pronouns. Unfortunately, people explaining the mnemonic for remembering the spelling of its sometimes over-simplify and say something like "it doesn't have an apostrophe because it's a pronoun, like his or her". But actually, as already mentioned, there are many pronouns that have possessive forms ending in -'s. The pronoun it belongs to a particular subset of pronouns that have irregular (or at least irregularly spelled) possessive forms.



RiMMER's answer describes yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its as "standard" possessive pronouns. For some people, it might help to think of this instead in terms of "definite pronouns" and "indefinite pronouns".



The definite pronouns you, he, she, it, we, they have possessive forms that are spelled without an apostrophe even though they end in "s". (Some definite pronouns have possessive forms that don't even end in "s", such as my/mine, her, our, their.)



But the more numerous indefinite pronouns (one, someone, somebody, nobody, another, etc.) take the usual -'s to mark the possessive.



Not all pronouns belong to either of these two categories. As tenfour mentioned in a comment, there's also the interrogative and relative pronoun who which has the irregularly spelled possessive form whose.



How one and one's is different from other indefinite pronouns



The possessive of one (one's) is formed the same way as the possessive of other indefinite pronouns, such as someone (someone's), but it is used a bit differently. For most people, one is consistently used with the possessive form one's. Other indefinite pronouns can (in fact, must) be referenced in some situations with the possessive form of a third-person definite pronoun like his, her or their. Here's an example of what I mean:




  • Someone left his/her/their hat on the table.


  • No one likes to have his/her/their word doubted.



We don't use someone's or no one's in this context (i.e., to refer back to an earlier use of someone or no one in the same sentence). However, many people would say the following sentence:






  • One does not like to have one's word doubted.




A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, by H. W. Fowler (OUP's "Classic" First Edition)



The linked passage in Fowler mentions that "One does not like to have his word doubted" also existed in his time as a competing form. I don't know to what extent modern writers use his (or perhaps their) in sentences like this, but it's definitely less common than one's.



Another way one is unlike the other indefinite pronouns is that it has a special reflexive form, oneself.






share|improve this answer
























    protected by NVZ Dec 29 '16 at 17:43



    Thank you for your interest in this question.
    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



    Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    31














    The correct answer is one's!



    All possessives get an apostrophe, except the standard possessive pronouns and these are:




    yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its




    Apart of these, always add an apostrophe.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 6





      @Bacon Did you see the frightened ones? (Goodbye Blue Sky)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:10






    • 1





      @Bacon: And the Great Old Ones are Great Old People, too? :)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:21






    • 1





      @Bacon @user9325 - The Young Ones.

      – Karl
      May 21 '11 at 5:37








    • 6





      @Bacon It's not so uncommon. Try these: "Son, would you like the purple ones or the blue ones?" "Wow, (pointing at animals) look at the little ones!" Saying "almost always incorrect" is incorrect.

      – ErikE
      May 21 '11 at 7:30






    • 3





      @endolith - 1) This is English we're talking about; you expected logic? <g> As stated in the answer, there are six "standard" (by which we mean "irregular") pronouns; apart from those, you should add an apostrophe. Try not to think too hard about why those six are different from all the others - you'll only make yourself old before your time. 2) Yes, "the young ones' music makes me angry and gives me a headache" is correct.

      – MT_Head
      Jun 7 '11 at 7:48
















    31














    The correct answer is one's!



    All possessives get an apostrophe, except the standard possessive pronouns and these are:




    yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its




    Apart of these, always add an apostrophe.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 6





      @Bacon Did you see the frightened ones? (Goodbye Blue Sky)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:10






    • 1





      @Bacon: And the Great Old Ones are Great Old People, too? :)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:21






    • 1





      @Bacon @user9325 - The Young Ones.

      – Karl
      May 21 '11 at 5:37








    • 6





      @Bacon It's not so uncommon. Try these: "Son, would you like the purple ones or the blue ones?" "Wow, (pointing at animals) look at the little ones!" Saying "almost always incorrect" is incorrect.

      – ErikE
      May 21 '11 at 7:30






    • 3





      @endolith - 1) This is English we're talking about; you expected logic? <g> As stated in the answer, there are six "standard" (by which we mean "irregular") pronouns; apart from those, you should add an apostrophe. Try not to think too hard about why those six are different from all the others - you'll only make yourself old before your time. 2) Yes, "the young ones' music makes me angry and gives me a headache" is correct.

      – MT_Head
      Jun 7 '11 at 7:48














    31












    31








    31







    The correct answer is one's!



    All possessives get an apostrophe, except the standard possessive pronouns and these are:




    yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its




    Apart of these, always add an apostrophe.






    share|improve this answer















    The correct answer is one's!



    All possessives get an apostrophe, except the standard possessive pronouns and these are:




    yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its




    Apart of these, always add an apostrophe.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jun 7 '11 at 2:09









    vanden

    236128




    236128










    answered May 21 '11 at 1:27









    RiMMERRiMMER

    18.9k1376104




    18.9k1376104








    • 6





      @Bacon Did you see the frightened ones? (Goodbye Blue Sky)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:10






    • 1





      @Bacon: And the Great Old Ones are Great Old People, too? :)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:21






    • 1





      @Bacon @user9325 - The Young Ones.

      – Karl
      May 21 '11 at 5:37








    • 6





      @Bacon It's not so uncommon. Try these: "Son, would you like the purple ones or the blue ones?" "Wow, (pointing at animals) look at the little ones!" Saying "almost always incorrect" is incorrect.

      – ErikE
      May 21 '11 at 7:30






    • 3





      @endolith - 1) This is English we're talking about; you expected logic? <g> As stated in the answer, there are six "standard" (by which we mean "irregular") pronouns; apart from those, you should add an apostrophe. Try not to think too hard about why those six are different from all the others - you'll only make yourself old before your time. 2) Yes, "the young ones' music makes me angry and gives me a headache" is correct.

      – MT_Head
      Jun 7 '11 at 7:48














    • 6





      @Bacon Did you see the frightened ones? (Goodbye Blue Sky)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:10






    • 1





      @Bacon: And the Great Old Ones are Great Old People, too? :)

      – Phira
      May 21 '11 at 5:21






    • 1





      @Bacon @user9325 - The Young Ones.

      – Karl
      May 21 '11 at 5:37








    • 6





      @Bacon It's not so uncommon. Try these: "Son, would you like the purple ones or the blue ones?" "Wow, (pointing at animals) look at the little ones!" Saying "almost always incorrect" is incorrect.

      – ErikE
      May 21 '11 at 7:30






    • 3





      @endolith - 1) This is English we're talking about; you expected logic? <g> As stated in the answer, there are six "standard" (by which we mean "irregular") pronouns; apart from those, you should add an apostrophe. Try not to think too hard about why those six are different from all the others - you'll only make yourself old before your time. 2) Yes, "the young ones' music makes me angry and gives me a headache" is correct.

      – MT_Head
      Jun 7 '11 at 7:48








    6




    6





    @Bacon Did you see the frightened ones? (Goodbye Blue Sky)

    – Phira
    May 21 '11 at 5:10





    @Bacon Did you see the frightened ones? (Goodbye Blue Sky)

    – Phira
    May 21 '11 at 5:10




    1




    1





    @Bacon: And the Great Old Ones are Great Old People, too? :)

    – Phira
    May 21 '11 at 5:21





    @Bacon: And the Great Old Ones are Great Old People, too? :)

    – Phira
    May 21 '11 at 5:21




    1




    1





    @Bacon @user9325 - The Young Ones.

    – Karl
    May 21 '11 at 5:37







    @Bacon @user9325 - The Young Ones.

    – Karl
    May 21 '11 at 5:37






    6




    6





    @Bacon It's not so uncommon. Try these: "Son, would you like the purple ones or the blue ones?" "Wow, (pointing at animals) look at the little ones!" Saying "almost always incorrect" is incorrect.

    – ErikE
    May 21 '11 at 7:30





    @Bacon It's not so uncommon. Try these: "Son, would you like the purple ones or the blue ones?" "Wow, (pointing at animals) look at the little ones!" Saying "almost always incorrect" is incorrect.

    – ErikE
    May 21 '11 at 7:30




    3




    3





    @endolith - 1) This is English we're talking about; you expected logic? <g> As stated in the answer, there are six "standard" (by which we mean "irregular") pronouns; apart from those, you should add an apostrophe. Try not to think too hard about why those six are different from all the others - you'll only make yourself old before your time. 2) Yes, "the young ones' music makes me angry and gives me a headache" is correct.

    – MT_Head
    Jun 7 '11 at 7:48





    @endolith - 1) This is English we're talking about; you expected logic? <g> As stated in the answer, there are six "standard" (by which we mean "irregular") pronouns; apart from those, you should add an apostrophe. Try not to think too hard about why those six are different from all the others - you'll only make yourself old before your time. 2) Yes, "the young ones' music makes me angry and gives me a headache" is correct.

    – MT_Head
    Jun 7 '11 at 7:48













    3














    Indefinite pronouns like one and somebody: one's, somebody's



    The possessive of the pronoun one is spelled one's. There are many types of pronouns. Unfortunately, people explaining the mnemonic for remembering the spelling of its sometimes over-simplify and say something like "it doesn't have an apostrophe because it's a pronoun, like his or her". But actually, as already mentioned, there are many pronouns that have possessive forms ending in -'s. The pronoun it belongs to a particular subset of pronouns that have irregular (or at least irregularly spelled) possessive forms.



    RiMMER's answer describes yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its as "standard" possessive pronouns. For some people, it might help to think of this instead in terms of "definite pronouns" and "indefinite pronouns".



    The definite pronouns you, he, she, it, we, they have possessive forms that are spelled without an apostrophe even though they end in "s". (Some definite pronouns have possessive forms that don't even end in "s", such as my/mine, her, our, their.)



    But the more numerous indefinite pronouns (one, someone, somebody, nobody, another, etc.) take the usual -'s to mark the possessive.



    Not all pronouns belong to either of these two categories. As tenfour mentioned in a comment, there's also the interrogative and relative pronoun who which has the irregularly spelled possessive form whose.



    How one and one's is different from other indefinite pronouns



    The possessive of one (one's) is formed the same way as the possessive of other indefinite pronouns, such as someone (someone's), but it is used a bit differently. For most people, one is consistently used with the possessive form one's. Other indefinite pronouns can (in fact, must) be referenced in some situations with the possessive form of a third-person definite pronoun like his, her or their. Here's an example of what I mean:




    • Someone left his/her/their hat on the table.


    • No one likes to have his/her/their word doubted.



    We don't use someone's or no one's in this context (i.e., to refer back to an earlier use of someone or no one in the same sentence). However, many people would say the following sentence:






    • One does not like to have one's word doubted.




    A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, by H. W. Fowler (OUP's "Classic" First Edition)



    The linked passage in Fowler mentions that "One does not like to have his word doubted" also existed in his time as a competing form. I don't know to what extent modern writers use his (or perhaps their) in sentences like this, but it's definitely less common than one's.



    Another way one is unlike the other indefinite pronouns is that it has a special reflexive form, oneself.






    share|improve this answer






























      3














      Indefinite pronouns like one and somebody: one's, somebody's



      The possessive of the pronoun one is spelled one's. There are many types of pronouns. Unfortunately, people explaining the mnemonic for remembering the spelling of its sometimes over-simplify and say something like "it doesn't have an apostrophe because it's a pronoun, like his or her". But actually, as already mentioned, there are many pronouns that have possessive forms ending in -'s. The pronoun it belongs to a particular subset of pronouns that have irregular (or at least irregularly spelled) possessive forms.



      RiMMER's answer describes yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its as "standard" possessive pronouns. For some people, it might help to think of this instead in terms of "definite pronouns" and "indefinite pronouns".



      The definite pronouns you, he, she, it, we, they have possessive forms that are spelled without an apostrophe even though they end in "s". (Some definite pronouns have possessive forms that don't even end in "s", such as my/mine, her, our, their.)



      But the more numerous indefinite pronouns (one, someone, somebody, nobody, another, etc.) take the usual -'s to mark the possessive.



      Not all pronouns belong to either of these two categories. As tenfour mentioned in a comment, there's also the interrogative and relative pronoun who which has the irregularly spelled possessive form whose.



      How one and one's is different from other indefinite pronouns



      The possessive of one (one's) is formed the same way as the possessive of other indefinite pronouns, such as someone (someone's), but it is used a bit differently. For most people, one is consistently used with the possessive form one's. Other indefinite pronouns can (in fact, must) be referenced in some situations with the possessive form of a third-person definite pronoun like his, her or their. Here's an example of what I mean:




      • Someone left his/her/their hat on the table.


      • No one likes to have his/her/their word doubted.



      We don't use someone's or no one's in this context (i.e., to refer back to an earlier use of someone or no one in the same sentence). However, many people would say the following sentence:






      • One does not like to have one's word doubted.




      A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, by H. W. Fowler (OUP's "Classic" First Edition)



      The linked passage in Fowler mentions that "One does not like to have his word doubted" also existed in his time as a competing form. I don't know to what extent modern writers use his (or perhaps their) in sentences like this, but it's definitely less common than one's.



      Another way one is unlike the other indefinite pronouns is that it has a special reflexive form, oneself.






      share|improve this answer




























        3












        3








        3







        Indefinite pronouns like one and somebody: one's, somebody's



        The possessive of the pronoun one is spelled one's. There are many types of pronouns. Unfortunately, people explaining the mnemonic for remembering the spelling of its sometimes over-simplify and say something like "it doesn't have an apostrophe because it's a pronoun, like his or her". But actually, as already mentioned, there are many pronouns that have possessive forms ending in -'s. The pronoun it belongs to a particular subset of pronouns that have irregular (or at least irregularly spelled) possessive forms.



        RiMMER's answer describes yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its as "standard" possessive pronouns. For some people, it might help to think of this instead in terms of "definite pronouns" and "indefinite pronouns".



        The definite pronouns you, he, she, it, we, they have possessive forms that are spelled without an apostrophe even though they end in "s". (Some definite pronouns have possessive forms that don't even end in "s", such as my/mine, her, our, their.)



        But the more numerous indefinite pronouns (one, someone, somebody, nobody, another, etc.) take the usual -'s to mark the possessive.



        Not all pronouns belong to either of these two categories. As tenfour mentioned in a comment, there's also the interrogative and relative pronoun who which has the irregularly spelled possessive form whose.



        How one and one's is different from other indefinite pronouns



        The possessive of one (one's) is formed the same way as the possessive of other indefinite pronouns, such as someone (someone's), but it is used a bit differently. For most people, one is consistently used with the possessive form one's. Other indefinite pronouns can (in fact, must) be referenced in some situations with the possessive form of a third-person definite pronoun like his, her or their. Here's an example of what I mean:




        • Someone left his/her/their hat on the table.


        • No one likes to have his/her/their word doubted.



        We don't use someone's or no one's in this context (i.e., to refer back to an earlier use of someone or no one in the same sentence). However, many people would say the following sentence:






        • One does not like to have one's word doubted.




        A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, by H. W. Fowler (OUP's "Classic" First Edition)



        The linked passage in Fowler mentions that "One does not like to have his word doubted" also existed in his time as a competing form. I don't know to what extent modern writers use his (or perhaps their) in sentences like this, but it's definitely less common than one's.



        Another way one is unlike the other indefinite pronouns is that it has a special reflexive form, oneself.






        share|improve this answer















        Indefinite pronouns like one and somebody: one's, somebody's



        The possessive of the pronoun one is spelled one's. There are many types of pronouns. Unfortunately, people explaining the mnemonic for remembering the spelling of its sometimes over-simplify and say something like "it doesn't have an apostrophe because it's a pronoun, like his or her". But actually, as already mentioned, there are many pronouns that have possessive forms ending in -'s. The pronoun it belongs to a particular subset of pronouns that have irregular (or at least irregularly spelled) possessive forms.



        RiMMER's answer describes yours, his, hers, ours, theirs, its as "standard" possessive pronouns. For some people, it might help to think of this instead in terms of "definite pronouns" and "indefinite pronouns".



        The definite pronouns you, he, she, it, we, they have possessive forms that are spelled without an apostrophe even though they end in "s". (Some definite pronouns have possessive forms that don't even end in "s", such as my/mine, her, our, their.)



        But the more numerous indefinite pronouns (one, someone, somebody, nobody, another, etc.) take the usual -'s to mark the possessive.



        Not all pronouns belong to either of these two categories. As tenfour mentioned in a comment, there's also the interrogative and relative pronoun who which has the irregularly spelled possessive form whose.



        How one and one's is different from other indefinite pronouns



        The possessive of one (one's) is formed the same way as the possessive of other indefinite pronouns, such as someone (someone's), but it is used a bit differently. For most people, one is consistently used with the possessive form one's. Other indefinite pronouns can (in fact, must) be referenced in some situations with the possessive form of a third-person definite pronoun like his, her or their. Here's an example of what I mean:




        • Someone left his/her/their hat on the table.


        • No one likes to have his/her/their word doubted.



        We don't use someone's or no one's in this context (i.e., to refer back to an earlier use of someone or no one in the same sentence). However, many people would say the following sentence:






        • One does not like to have one's word doubted.




        A Dictionary of Modern English Usage, by H. W. Fowler (OUP's "Classic" First Edition)



        The linked passage in Fowler mentions that "One does not like to have his word doubted" also existed in his time as a competing form. I don't know to what extent modern writers use his (or perhaps their) in sentences like this, but it's definitely less common than one's.



        Another way one is unlike the other indefinite pronouns is that it has a special reflexive form, oneself.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 8 hours ago

























        answered Dec 29 '16 at 17:38









        sumelicsumelic

        48.5k8114219




        48.5k8114219

















            protected by NVZ Dec 29 '16 at 17:43



            Thank you for your interest in this question.
            Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



            Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



            Popular posts from this blog

            If I really need a card on my start hand, how many mulligans make sense? [duplicate]

            Alcedinidae

            Can an atomic nucleus contain both particles and antiparticles? [duplicate]