How many people are in the picture described in this sentence? "I am looking at a photograph of Dominic and Rowan's mother."
One | 28 (46%) |
Two | 14 (23%) |
It could be one or two. | 18 (30%) |
Thanks to a reader for asking me this question. He correctly noted that the sentence is ambiguous, so congratulations to 30% of you. The photo could be of a man, Dominic, and a woman, Rowan's mother. Or, the photo could be of one person, a woman, who is the mother of both Dominic and Rowan. When you share the noun, you share the apostrophe, so if the woman is the mother of both boys/men, you need only one apostrophe.
To make certain this was not ambiguous, you would have to rewrite the sentence.
3 comments:
I am looking at a photograph of the mother of Dominic and Rowan.
or
I am looking at a photograph of Dominic with Rowan's mother.
Those work for me.
Swapping the order around tends to fix a lot of things...or reveal even more issues.
Post a Comment