


Selected reflections will be projected throughout the Chapel, and visitors can sit in the apse to contemplate the experiences of others as well as their own. Lit from within, each response becomes a devotional candle, and together they form an evolving field of light. Visitors are invited to share their experience on a scroll and place it upon an illuminated altar. Reeves have created a public ritual to contemplate loss in all forms: the loss of loved ones, relationships, health, and worlds we once knew-as well as the practices that have helped us endure. Influenced in equal parts by religious ceremonies and science fiction, artists Candy Chang and James A. This simple prompt will be asked of each visitor to After the End, a new site-specific installation in Green-Wood’s Historic Chapel. If there's no "s," you have to add both - first the apostrophe, and then the "s.Describe your loss. If there's already an "s" there, you can just add the apostrophe. Remember, a possessive noun needs an apostrophe and an "s" at the end. If a plural noun doesn't end in "s," add an apostrophe + "s" to create the possessive form. It is not necessary to add another "s" to the end of a possessive plural noun.ģ. Use an apostrophe after the "s" (s') at the end of a plural noun to show possession.


In this case, you can show possession for Ross in either of two ways:Ģ. It's also acceptable to add only an apostrophe to the end of singular nouns that end in "s" to make them possessive. Style guides vary when it comes to a name that ends in an "s." Even if the name ends in "s," it's still correct to add another " 's" to create the possessive form. Use an apostrophe +"s" ('s) to show that one person/thing owns or is a member of something. Let's take a look at three different uses of the possessive apostrophe.ġ. It would be difficult for possessives to exist without apostrophes.
