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Whoa. I'd call it Allen and Sharon's crib. And suggest that they change his last name.
What about 'Sharon and her partner Allens home'?
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Does that make it Allen's home?
"Allen and Sharon Nahhas' home" would be correct. When the word ends in an S, you only add the (possessive) apostrope, and not the extra S.
"Allen and Sharon Nahha's home" makes it look like their last name is 'Nahha' instead of 'Nahhas' and is therefore wrong.
The home of Allen and Sharon Nahha's Home.
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Which is correct grammar - do you put his or him before a verb?
by Answerbag Staff on July 12th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
Is pair singular or plural?
by Answerbag Staff on July 7th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
What is the most frequently spoken word used in the English language?
by Answerbag Staff on July 10th, 2010
| 1 person likes this
Is the sentence in the description gramatically correct?
by KATTALNUVA on January 8th, 2012
| 3 people like this
VSO Syntax! Could someone please explain to me where prepositions ETC ETC would go in the VERB-SUBJECT-OBJECT order? Thanks! :D
by CrimsonFlame on December 24th, 2011
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You're reading I want to know the appropriate way to write the possessive form of the following: The home of Allen and Sharon Nahhas Would it be Allen and Sharon Nahhas's home or Allen or Sharon Nahhas' home?
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