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#72
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#73
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On 27 Jun 2006 11:25:43 -0700, "Solario"
wrote: Mark B wrote: Which is right, St James' Park (on the signs) St James Park (in the FGW Timetable) Pronounced St James's Park, both locally and on the AutoAnouncer Opinion The first example could be wrong in context. If it is a street name sign it should read "St James Park". If it is a park name board then I guess St James' Park could be correct. Only if it was named after two or more people called "Jame". snip -- _______ +---------------------------------------------------+ |\\ //| | Charles Ellson: | | \\ // | +---------------------------------------------------+ | | | // \\ | Alba gu brath |//___\\| |
#74
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In article Mark B writes:
Which is right, St James' Park (on the signs) St James Park (in the FGW Timetable) Pronounced St James's Park, both locally and on the AutoAnouncer I think you never will know which is right. If I remember right, there are Earl's Court and Barron's Court, both with and without apostrophe. LT uses the apostrophe in one of them, the street signs use it on the other. -- dik t. winter, cwi, kruislaan 413, 1098 sj amsterdam, nederland, +31205924131 home: bovenover 215, 1025 jn amsterdam, nederland; http://www.cwi.nl/~dik/ |
#75
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In message , Dik T. Winter writes
In article Mark B writes: Which is right, St James' Park (on the signs) St James Park (in the FGW Timetable) Pronounced St James's Park, both locally and on the AutoAnouncer I think you never will know which is right. If I remember right, there are Earl's Court and Barron's Court, both with and without apostrophe. LT uses the apostrophe in one of them, the street signs use it on the other. Exactly. When it comes to place names, their form is dictated by historical precedent and custom rather than rules of grammar. For instance, in Elizabethan times, travellers from the north would most likely enter the city through "Bysshopes Gate". Despite the fact that the standard genitive ending ("-es") indicates a possessive noun, it was never modernised to "Bishop's Gate" or even "Bishops' Gate" - instead (and as early as the 17th century) it became simply Bishopsgate. -- Paul Terry |
#76
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In message , Roland Perry
writes In message , at 08:21:09 on Tue, 27 Jun 2006, Ned Carlson remarked: However, the official royal website calls the palace, St. James's Palace. And all the old maps I have ever found (going back centuries) also use that spelling (for the palace and nearby roads, churches etc). If you go back far enough, you will arrive at the pre-apostropheic age: for instance, John Norden's plan of c.1600 gives "Saint James Parke". But I certainly agree that "James's" appears on most maps after that date, once the apostrophe had become an accepted device. -- Paul Terry |
#77
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#78
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wrote:
So the question is: Do cartographers follow street signposting conventions, or, do they "correct" the spelling of street names back into their normal English form? Moreover, has cartographic practice, in this respect, changed over time? Adrian. What I'm wondering, is HTF did apostrophes get into the English language, anyway? None of its ancestor/contributing languages (Anglo-Saxon, Norse, French, Celtic) use or used apostrophes, did they? Didn't the British government go on a campaign a few years ago to eliminate unnecessary punctuation in bureaucratic communications, aside from commas and full stops (what us Americans call a period)? -- Ned Carlson SW side of Chicago, USA www.tubezone.net |
#79
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![]() Mark B wrote: Which is right, St James' Park (on the signs) St James Park (in the FGW Timetable) Pronounced St James's Park, both locally and on the AutoAnouncer St James's Park, because that's the name of the park. Mike |
#80
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In article . com,
mmellor writes Mark B wrote: Which is right, St James' Park (on the signs) St James Park (in the FGW Timetable) Pronounced St James's Park, both locally and on the AutoAnouncer St James's Park, because that's the name of the park. Mike Seen on a car number plate yesterday St John's Wood bmw or something like that .co.uk or .com ![]() -- Tony Sayer |
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