On Saturday 29 June 2002 03:38 pm, you wrote:
> Hmm... Any English professors in the audience? We could do:
>
> User
> Users
> User's
> Users'
>
> All of these examples can be found in use by other Linux groups on the
> 'net. We're a group of "Linux users," but we're also a "user group." So
> I guess it depends on where you put the emphasis on the phrase. The Linux
> group in Portland uses:
> "Portland Linux Unix Group" which gets rid of the "is it plural or not"
> problem all together. ;-)
> ~M
If you want to get excessively grammatical:
User = noun, sungular
Users= noun, plural
User's = noun, singular, possessive
Users' = noun, plural, possessive
Any of the four could grammatically appear before "Group" .
"User's" implies "only one". Sort of "I am the only Linux user."
"Users'" implies "many." "I am one of many Linux users."
"User" and "Users" act as noun adjuncts; that is, nouns acting as adjectives
telling "what kind of" group just as in "school house" , "school" tells "what
kind of house.
My choice would be "Users" as it implies multiple users, and lacks the
clutter of the apostrophe, which, in a logo, is really unnecessary.
--
Bob Eaton
Curiosity didn't kill the cat: it was lack of information.
--
Bob Eaton
Curiosity didn't kill the cat: it was lack of information.