20:1620:16, 11 April 2024diffhist+49 m
Charles III
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tags: Revertednowiki addedVisual edit
20:0420:04, 11 April 2024diffhist−11 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
20:0320:03, 11 April 2024diffhist−11 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
20:0120:01, 11 April 2024diffhist−2 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
19:5919:59, 11 April 2024diffhist−4 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
19:4219:42, 11 April 2024diffhist−8 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
19:1619:16, 11 April 2024diffhist−1 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
19:1519:15, 11 April 2024diffhist−2 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
19:1419:14, 11 April 2024diffhist−2 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
19:1319:13, 11 April 2024diffhist−2 m
Cyrus the Great
When a noun (Proper or otherwise) ends in an "S", the correct way to denote possession is by an apostrophe alone, WITHOUT a following "S".Tag: Reverted
19:4219:42, 9 September 2022diffhist0
Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex
I removed the hyphens after "great", when NOT followed by another "great" (EX: "his great grandmother" v. "his great-great grandmother"). I did NOT remove the incorrect hyphen in citations, since those are direct quotes from article titles. -jlgTag: Reverted
19:3819:38, 9 September 2022diffhist0
Diana, Princess of Wales
I removed the hyphens after "great", when NOT followed by another "great" (EX: "his great grandmother" v. "his great-great grandmother"). I also added a hyphen for "fourth-great grandmother".Tag: Reverted
19:3419:34, 9 September 2022diffhist0
Charles III
I removed the hyphens after "great", when NOT followed by another "great". EX: "his great grandmother" v. "his great-great grandmother".Tag: Reverted
19:1419:14, 9 September 2022diffhist0
Peter Phillips
I had removed the hyphens after "great", when NOT followed by another "great". EX: "his great grandmother" v. "his great-great grandmother". (I did NOT remove the incorrect hyphen in citations, since those are direct quotes from article titles. -jlg))Tag: Reverted
06:5706:57, 16 September 2020diffhist−89
19 Kids and Counting
→Grandchildren: - I changed "with what would have been their first/second pregnancy" to "during their first/second pregnancy". A miscarriage doesn't negate the pregnancy's existence. I also re-worded the sentence regarding Joy-Anna & Austin's miscarriage, put commas after the years in the sentences, and I put periods at the end of the sentences.
06:4506:45, 16 September 2020diffhist−33
19 Kids and Counting
→Children: - I changed "with what would have been their second/twentieth pregnancy" to "during their second/twentieth pregnancy". A miscarriage doesn't negate the pregnancy's existence. I also changed "although" to "even though" for grammar.