Ouch! Nick, you put it the right way.
That is what I wanted to write, but I
messed it up. I'm sorry.
Puroda
On 22.06.2016 23:50, Nick Hough wrote:
> It would be the other way around:
>
> If you wrote it : "my masters thesis”, because it is the thesis from
> your “masters" degree
> If your master
It would be the other way around:
If you wrote it : "my masters thesis”, because it is the thesis from your
“masters" degree
If your master wrote it : "my master’s thesis”, because the thesis is owned
(hence the possessive apostrophe) by the “master"
Both could be valid English. Which version i
Imho, it depends.
If you wrote it : "my master's thesis"
If your master wrote it : "my masters thesis"
but I am not a native English speaker :-)
Purodha
On 22.06.2016 18:33, Marco A.G.Pinto wrote:
> Hello!
>
> Using MS Word 2016 I typed "blah blah my masters thesis" and Word
> suggested me to re
Hello!
Using MS Word 2016 I typed "blah blah my masters thesis" and Word
suggested me to replace "masters" with "master's".
Could this rule be added to LanguageTool?
Thanks!
Kind regards,
>Marco A.G.Pinto
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Currently for antipattern to work it needs to overlap with the pattern.
Would it make sense to add an attribute (e.g. "overlap") that can be
set to false so the antipattern can be appied anywhere in the
sentence?
E.g. often in rules when I need to guess the context by some words in
the sentence I