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Editors - Have You Ever Asked an Author to Change a Character Name?

awnlee jawking 🚫

I'm thinking specifically of characters with a last name ending in something tricky like 's'. I remember a writing guide advising beginners never to do that because so many get it wrong when they try to form the plural or possessive.

AJ

Michael Loucks 🚫

@awnlee jawking

No, but I have had debates with proofreaders over how I handle possessives and plurals with names ending in 's'.

the Loucks (not the Louckses)
the Loucks' house (not the Loucks's)

Of course, I was at the courthouse the other day, and saw a sign that stated "No attorney's beyond this point." Sigh.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Michael Loucks

the Loucks (not the Louckses)
the Loucks' house (not the Loucks's)

I personally would go with the versions in parentheses - there's good precedent from old English (both the plural and possessive were formed by adding 'es' but the 'e' in the possessive evolved into the the apostrophe even though the two are pronounced the same). And they used to be the standard forms, although nowadays they're seen as somewhat archaic.

Your preferred form of the possessive seems to be accepted by many (most?) authorities but I'm not comfortable with your preferred form of the plural - it could cause ambiguities for the reader.

How would you pronounce your preferred options? In British English, people seem to pronounce them as though the 'es' is still there.

AJ

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks 🚫

@awnlee jawking

How would you pronounce your preferred options? In British English, people seem to pronounce them as though the 'es' is still there.

I'd pronounce it 'Loucks' or (to use AWLL) 'Adams', the same as the singular. My real surname ends in 's' and that's how I handle it. No additional 's' or 'es' and pronounced the same as the singular.

I'd never use (and never have used) the equivalent of 'Louckses' or 'Adamses'. That sounds wrong and always has. Maybe blame my dad, as I simply followed his practice (similar to Ray in AWLL, he was born in New York City and grew up on Long Island and in New Hampshire).

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Michael Loucks

FWIW, I watched an episode of Magnum on TV tonight. The subtitles said "Higgins'", the character said "Higginses".

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Michael Loucks

I'd never use (and never have used) the equivalent of 'Louckses' or 'Adamses'. That sounds wrong and always has.

Have you ever encountered the Brit expression 'To keep up with the Joneses'?

Has the trailing 'es' survived to your corner of America?

AJ

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

Have you ever encountered the Brit expression 'To keep up with the Joneses'?

Has the trailing 'es' survived to your corner of America?

Yes, and most people I know do make the plural by adding 'es'. As noted, it sounds wrong to me, and given my RL name ends in an 's', I strongly prefer not having the added 'es'.

My actual preference would be 'the Adams family' or 'the Loucks family'.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Michael Loucks

the Loucks (not the Louckses)

The plural for Loucks is actually Louckses (as in "the Louckses live in that house."

If the name ends in s, z, ch, or sh, you need to add es. That means the Davis family becomes the Davises, the French family becomes the Frenches, the Hernandez family becomes the Hernandezes, and the Glaves family becomes the Glaveses.

If the name ends in x, also add esβ€”unless the x is silent. In that case, simply add an s. So the Felix family becomes the Felixes, and the Bordeaux family becomes the Bordeauxs.

Replies:   Michael Loucks  Joe Long
Michael Loucks 🚫

@Switch Blayde

The plural for Loucks is actually Louckses (as in "the Louckses live in that house."

Both are accepted. And, of course, the preference of the individual as how they are referred to does have some import, at least in my book. I'm OK with certain versions of my name, but not others. 'Mike' or 'Michael' would be OK, but not 'Mikey'. Ditto for my MC in AWLL, Steve or Stephen, but never Stevie.

In the end, though, both are acceptable (and I can provide references if you wish).

Joe Long 🚫

@Switch Blayde

Plural: "The Louckses live in that house."
Possessive: "That is the Loucks' house."

Michael Loucks 🚫
Updated:

@Joe Long

Plural: "The Louckses live in that house."

Possessive: "That is the Loucks' house."

As the possessor of the name, I use:

"The Loucks live in that house." (eliding 'family' after 'Loucks' to avoid the plural I find jarring)

"That is the Loucks' house."

Ditto 'Adams' in AWLL. 'Adamses' and 'Louckses' appear zero times in he roughly 11,000,000 words of the two stories. The other protagonist has a name ending in 'e'. πŸ€ͺ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Joe Long

Plural: "The Louckses live in that house."
Possessive: "That is the Loucks' house."

If you're going to use the best option for the plural, why not use its counterpart for the possessive, "Louckses'"?

Or you could cheat, employ a noun as an adjective, and say "The Loucks house". It gives less information about how many Louckses live there but it is technically acceptable.

AJ

palamedes 🚫

@Michael Loucks

Of course, I was at the courthouse the other day, and saw a sign that stated "No attorney's beyond this point." Sigh.

Would the attorneys understand the sign if it was written correctly ? Then again it is their job to find loopholes or ways around the written rules of law.

Mushroom 🚫

@Michael Loucks

the Loucks' house (not the Loucks's)

Which is actually the origin of the old joke "Who is buried in Grants' Tomb?"

When spoken aloud, it sounds like the possessive, so most just assume "General Grant". However, when written properly it is the plural possessive, as both General and Mrs. Grant are in the tomb.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Mushroom

Which is actually the origin of the old joke "Who is buried in Grants' Tomb?"

When spoken aloud, it sounds like the possessive, so most just assume "General Grant". However, when written properly it is the plural possessive, as both General and Mrs. Grant are in the tomb.

Actually that originates with an early quiz game show question. My understanding is that it's a trick question, because no one is buried in Grant's tomb. General and Mrs Grant are entombed above ground.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom 🚫

@Dominions Son

Actually that originates with an early quiz game show question. My understanding is that it's a trick question, because no one is buried in Grant's tomb. General and Mrs Grant are entombed above ground.

And that is true, as I have been there.

But for some reason, we almost never say "entombed". In fact, I have heard the term "buried" used for both Lenin and Mao, and they also are entombed and not buried.

But even if one uses "entombed", it is still both of them because it is "Grants' Tomb", and not "Grant's Tomb". Even though a great many still spell it "Grant's". Hell, I have even seen some spell it "Grant's' Tomb" for some strange reason. As if they can not figure out where to put the apostrophe so use two of them.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Mushroom

But for some reason, we almost never say "entombed". In fact, I have heard the term "buried" used for both Lenin and Mao, and they also are entombed and not buried.

QEII is in a vault with her ancestors. I'm not sure whether it's above ground level or not but the media commonly referred to her as being buried or interred.

If someone is embalmed in a lead-lined coffin, presumably indefinitely, is that a good thing because it's a case of carbon capture and storage, or a bad thing because the person doesn't get recycled so is effectively single-use? ;-)

AJ

Switch Blayde 🚫

@awnlee jawking

QEII is in a vault with her ancestors. I'm not sure whether it's above ground level

It's below ground. On a news program they were standing over King Henry VIII's and QEII's will be near it.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

Thanks.

AJ

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@awnlee jawking

the person doesn't get recycled

I just saw California is allowing for composting of corpses now, so you can become fertilizer.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom 🚫
Updated:

@StarFleet Carl

I just saw California is allowing for composting of corpses now, so you can become fertilizer.

Well, a few years ago Luke Perry was buried in Tennessee in a mushroom suit.

So when I die, my family can save money by just putting my body in the green bin?

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Mushroom

When spoken aloud, it sounds like the possessive,

In my neck of the woods, "Grants'" would likely be pronounced "Grantses" so there wouldn't be any ambiguity.

AJ

Sarkasmus 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Yes, but it had nothing to do with the name ending on an "S".

He had a situation going where Father and Son shared the same name, like "Ben Sr." and "Ben Jr.". But as the story progressed, he felt it was unnatural for people to actually call a person "Ben Sr." when having a conversation with them. So, everyone called both, father and son, just "Ben". It got extremely confusing very quickly.

StarFleet Carl 🚫
Updated:

@Sarkasmus

He had a situation going where Father and Son shared the same name

That was real life in my family. My dad and brother were Charles Sr. and Junior - and the same with my grandfather and uncle. So, Dad was Chuck, and my brother was Chuckie. Grandpa was Everett, and my uncle was called 'Junior'.

ETA: When Grandpa passed away, Uncle Junior became Uncle Everett.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Sarkasmus

So, everyone called both, father and son, just "Ben"

That's odd. Typically, one has a nickname, or a middle name is used to differentiate them.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Switch Blayde

Typically, one has a nickname, or a middle name is used to differentiate them.

My understanding has always been that to be Jr (what Sarkasmus specified), the full name, not just first name had to be the same.

Now, by that rule, different nicknames could be used or one could be first name and one middle name, but for a genuine Jr/Sr situation using the middle name for both wouldn't solve anything.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Dominions Son

but for a genuine Jr/Sr situation using the middle name for both wouldn't solve anything.

If they were Benjamin, Sr. and Benjamin, Jr., one could be called Ben and the child Benny. Or if they were Ben Jack, Sr. and Ben Jack, Jr., they could be called Ben and Jack. Or simply Ben and Junior.

I find it hard for them both to be called by the same name (Benjamin or Ben). That would be too confusing (as it is to the reader).

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Sarkasmus

Yes, but it had nothing to do with the name ending on an "S".

A beta reader/proofreader once advised me to change a character name because the historic antagonist and his historic nemesis both had names starting with the same letter and they found it confusing. (The protagonist was modern day and having to fight the resurrected historic antagonist).

Perhaps it's 'author blindness' but I couldn't see the problem. The anthology my story was supposed to appear in got overcome by circumstances, so in the end it was moot.

On the other hand, I found the two Helens in GreyWolf's do-over very confusing at first.

AJ

Replies:   richardshagrin
richardshagrin 🚫

@awnlee jawking

two Helens

There is always Hel and Saint Helens. Particularly if one of the characters want to mount St. Helens.

joel.sommers 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

Great discussion. As another American with a surname ending in S, I want to mention that using the ES suffix to pluralize a surname sounds extremely British to my ears. In fact, when I read a surname with that affectation, my inner narrator instantly switches to a David Attenborough-esque delivery.

And, sidenote, hearing the ES surname suffix also causes me to hear Gollum saying "hobbitses," and that is the best thing about the exercise.

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