I am continuing to ignore the crazy bad news. So there.
In running all around town, I made some EXCELLENT trades: I left the house with two hardcover books, and came home with seven paperbacks. One hardcover went back to the library, where I got three paperbacks out, and the other went to the post office, where I had a box from Amazon waiting for me. Right on, mang.
Got it, thanks for trying! We got the answer we wanted, which is always nice.
Q. When using the plural of “ad,” i.e, “ad’s,” is it incorrect to use the apostrophe? The three-letter string “ads” just looks so wrong when typesetting it. Would appreciate your guidance.
A. “Ad” is just a regular word, and the plural “ads” is also regular, so there’s no need to mess with it. Plurals almost never take an apostrophe. Chicago style uses an apostrophe for the plural of lowercase single letters (x’s and o’s), but for little else (for instance, we write “dos and don’ts”). Of course, if you come across a plural that would be misunderstood without an apostrophe, you should use one: for instance, in A’s and B’s, the first term would be mistaken for “As” without an apostrophe, and the second term uses the apostrophe because it would look inconsistent to style them in different ways. Please see CMS 7.16 and 7.63–65 for more examples and exceptions.
Where did that cite come from, brenda? I think I want to bookmark it.
Should I apply for a job I think I'm probably underqualified for (both on paper and in real life), but which could be really cool, and pays a TON of money?
of course you should apply - what's the worst that can happen? nothing.
OK. OK. I think I'll wait until after my career advice brunch tomorrow.
Seriously, even thinking about applying for real jobs makes my hands sweat.
Bjorn Borg is auctioning off his trophies.
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Chicago Manual of Style Q&A: [link]