This short guide points out the most common errors of English grammar and language that I find on Literotica, including misused apostrophes, the verbs "lay" and "lie", the word "hang", and the use of simply the wrong word.
THE APOSTROPHE
One of the most common, and, for those who know better, most annoying grammatical errors in writing is the misuse of the apostrophe. Because its primary use is to denote possession, many people treat it like it can be used that way for anything. If I were one of those people, the previous sentence would begin "Because it's primary use is to denote possession..." That would be WRONG!
In most cases, an apostrophe followed by an "s" does indeed denote possession: "Uncle Tom's Cabin" (a book), "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (a movie), "Tom's Diner" (a song), etc. But for personal pronouns (words that are not nouns but refer to things that are nouns), this is not the case. If it were, you would see the following:
me > me's
you > you's
we > we's
they > they's
While "(s)he's" and "it's" are words, they do not indicate possession. More about them later.
Instead of adding " 's " to the end of a personal pronoun, you use a completely different pronoun, called a POSSESSIVE PRONOUN. Possessive pronouns are so called because they are clingy bastards and hate being separated from their "s" by an apostrophe (just kidding, but that's one way to remember how they work). Some are so clingy, in fact, that they simply decided to kill their "s" and bury it under the floorboard in a secluded cabin in the woods, so nobody else will be able to have it. T Thus, instead of the abominations shown above, we use the following:
I > my, mine
you > your, yours
he > his
she > her, hers
it > its <-------------------- this is often misspelled "it's", which is WRONG.
we > our, ours
they > their, theirs <--- while not as common as "it's", "they're" is also WRONG.
Now, when you have an apostrophe with a pronoun, it is no longer a pronoun, or at least not in its entirety. It is technically a full sentence, and depending on the letters after the apostrophe, the tense can differ:
I have [had it] > I've