“Can you send me Fred and your flight information?” [duplicate]












2















This question already has an answer here:




  • Compound possessives and yours [duplicate]

    3 answers



  • “My wife and I's seafood collaboration dinner”

    6 answers



  • How would you write the possessive with yourself and another person? [duplicate]

    1 answer



  • Possessive-S/apostrophe in a list, including the first and second person

    2 answers



  • “Nikki's and Alice's X” vs. “Nikki and Alice's X”

    3 answers




This doesn't quite sound right but might be right. Consider



"Can you send me Fred and Amy's flight information?" This is correct via The Chicago Manual of Style.



Alternatively,



"Can you send me your and Fred's flight information?"



"Can you send me Fred's and your flight information?



or even
"Can you send me Fred and yours flight information?"



How about some help?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by tchrist 12 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.











  • 1




    How would you like Fred packaged for shipment? And do you want him sent separately from my itinerary or together?
    – Jim
    12 hours ago










  • Be­cause the clitic apos­tro­phe-s style at­taches only to com­plete noun phrases not to per­sonal pro­nouns that al­ready have their own un­a­pos­tro­phized case in­flec­tions, no com­pound pos­ses­sive de­ter­min­ers us­ing pro­nouns in the first or sec­ond per­son that ev­ery­one is al­ways com­pletely com­fort­able with ex­ist in English. Please see the many an­swers in the linked du­pli­cates and re­lated ques­tions; if you feel that those still do not an­swer your ques­tion, then please edit your ques­tion to say why they did not do so, so that you can ask that it be re­öpened.
    – tchrist
    12 hours ago












  • Thanks. I think I've read the "my wife's and my" answer before, too, but had no memory of it. Thus Fred's and your is the (arbitrary) standard
    – Stu W
    2 hours ago
















2















This question already has an answer here:




  • Compound possessives and yours [duplicate]

    3 answers



  • “My wife and I's seafood collaboration dinner”

    6 answers



  • How would you write the possessive with yourself and another person? [duplicate]

    1 answer



  • Possessive-S/apostrophe in a list, including the first and second person

    2 answers



  • “Nikki's and Alice's X” vs. “Nikki and Alice's X”

    3 answers




This doesn't quite sound right but might be right. Consider



"Can you send me Fred and Amy's flight information?" This is correct via The Chicago Manual of Style.



Alternatively,



"Can you send me your and Fred's flight information?"



"Can you send me Fred's and your flight information?



or even
"Can you send me Fred and yours flight information?"



How about some help?










share|improve this question















marked as duplicate by tchrist 12 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.











  • 1




    How would you like Fred packaged for shipment? And do you want him sent separately from my itinerary or together?
    – Jim
    12 hours ago










  • Be­cause the clitic apos­tro­phe-s style at­taches only to com­plete noun phrases not to per­sonal pro­nouns that al­ready have their own un­a­pos­tro­phized case in­flec­tions, no com­pound pos­ses­sive de­ter­min­ers us­ing pro­nouns in the first or sec­ond per­son that ev­ery­one is al­ways com­pletely com­fort­able with ex­ist in English. Please see the many an­swers in the linked du­pli­cates and re­lated ques­tions; if you feel that those still do not an­swer your ques­tion, then please edit your ques­tion to say why they did not do so, so that you can ask that it be re­öpened.
    – tchrist
    12 hours ago












  • Thanks. I think I've read the "my wife's and my" answer before, too, but had no memory of it. Thus Fred's and your is the (arbitrary) standard
    – Stu W
    2 hours ago














2












2








2








This question already has an answer here:




  • Compound possessives and yours [duplicate]

    3 answers



  • “My wife and I's seafood collaboration dinner”

    6 answers



  • How would you write the possessive with yourself and another person? [duplicate]

    1 answer



  • Possessive-S/apostrophe in a list, including the first and second person

    2 answers



  • “Nikki's and Alice's X” vs. “Nikki and Alice's X”

    3 answers




This doesn't quite sound right but might be right. Consider



"Can you send me Fred and Amy's flight information?" This is correct via The Chicago Manual of Style.



Alternatively,



"Can you send me your and Fred's flight information?"



"Can you send me Fred's and your flight information?



or even
"Can you send me Fred and yours flight information?"



How about some help?










share|improve this question
















This question already has an answer here:




  • Compound possessives and yours [duplicate]

    3 answers



  • “My wife and I's seafood collaboration dinner”

    6 answers



  • How would you write the possessive with yourself and another person? [duplicate]

    1 answer



  • Possessive-S/apostrophe in a list, including the first and second person

    2 answers



  • “Nikki's and Alice's X” vs. “Nikki and Alice's X”

    3 answers




This doesn't quite sound right but might be right. Consider



"Can you send me Fred and Amy's flight information?" This is correct via The Chicago Manual of Style.



Alternatively,



"Can you send me your and Fred's flight information?"



"Can you send me Fred's and your flight information?



or even
"Can you send me Fred and yours flight information?"



How about some help?





This question already has an answer here:




  • Compound possessives and yours [duplicate]

    3 answers



  • “My wife and I's seafood collaboration dinner”

    6 answers



  • How would you write the possessive with yourself and another person? [duplicate]

    1 answer



  • Possessive-S/apostrophe in a list, including the first and second person

    2 answers



  • “Nikki's and Alice's X” vs. “Nikki and Alice's X”

    3 answers








possessives compound-possessives possessive-pronouns






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




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edited 12 hours ago









tchrist

108k28290463




108k28290463










asked 13 hours ago









Stu W

5,86541634




5,86541634




marked as duplicate by tchrist 12 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by tchrist 12 hours ago


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    How would you like Fred packaged for shipment? And do you want him sent separately from my itinerary or together?
    – Jim
    12 hours ago










  • Be­cause the clitic apos­tro­phe-s style at­taches only to com­plete noun phrases not to per­sonal pro­nouns that al­ready have their own un­a­pos­tro­phized case in­flec­tions, no com­pound pos­ses­sive de­ter­min­ers us­ing pro­nouns in the first or sec­ond per­son that ev­ery­one is al­ways com­pletely com­fort­able with ex­ist in English. Please see the many an­swers in the linked du­pli­cates and re­lated ques­tions; if you feel that those still do not an­swer your ques­tion, then please edit your ques­tion to say why they did not do so, so that you can ask that it be re­öpened.
    – tchrist
    12 hours ago












  • Thanks. I think I've read the "my wife's and my" answer before, too, but had no memory of it. Thus Fred's and your is the (arbitrary) standard
    – Stu W
    2 hours ago














  • 1




    How would you like Fred packaged for shipment? And do you want him sent separately from my itinerary or together?
    – Jim
    12 hours ago










  • Be­cause the clitic apos­tro­phe-s style at­taches only to com­plete noun phrases not to per­sonal pro­nouns that al­ready have their own un­a­pos­tro­phized case in­flec­tions, no com­pound pos­ses­sive de­ter­min­ers us­ing pro­nouns in the first or sec­ond per­son that ev­ery­one is al­ways com­pletely com­fort­able with ex­ist in English. Please see the many an­swers in the linked du­pli­cates and re­lated ques­tions; if you feel that those still do not an­swer your ques­tion, then please edit your ques­tion to say why they did not do so, so that you can ask that it be re­öpened.
    – tchrist
    12 hours ago












  • Thanks. I think I've read the "my wife's and my" answer before, too, but had no memory of it. Thus Fred's and your is the (arbitrary) standard
    – Stu W
    2 hours ago








1




1




How would you like Fred packaged for shipment? And do you want him sent separately from my itinerary or together?
– Jim
12 hours ago




How would you like Fred packaged for shipment? And do you want him sent separately from my itinerary or together?
– Jim
12 hours ago












Be­cause the clitic apos­tro­phe-s style at­taches only to com­plete noun phrases not to per­sonal pro­nouns that al­ready have their own un­a­pos­tro­phized case in­flec­tions, no com­pound pos­ses­sive de­ter­min­ers us­ing pro­nouns in the first or sec­ond per­son that ev­ery­one is al­ways com­pletely com­fort­able with ex­ist in English. Please see the many an­swers in the linked du­pli­cates and re­lated ques­tions; if you feel that those still do not an­swer your ques­tion, then please edit your ques­tion to say why they did not do so, so that you can ask that it be re­öpened.
– tchrist
12 hours ago






Be­cause the clitic apos­tro­phe-s style at­taches only to com­plete noun phrases not to per­sonal pro­nouns that al­ready have their own un­a­pos­tro­phized case in­flec­tions, no com­pound pos­ses­sive de­ter­min­ers us­ing pro­nouns in the first or sec­ond per­son that ev­ery­one is al­ways com­pletely com­fort­able with ex­ist in English. Please see the many an­swers in the linked du­pli­cates and re­lated ques­tions; if you feel that those still do not an­swer your ques­tion, then please edit your ques­tion to say why they did not do so, so that you can ask that it be re­öpened.
– tchrist
12 hours ago














Thanks. I think I've read the "my wife's and my" answer before, too, but had no memory of it. Thus Fred's and your is the (arbitrary) standard
– Stu W
2 hours ago




Thanks. I think I've read the "my wife's and my" answer before, too, but had no memory of it. Thus Fred's and your is the (arbitrary) standard
– Stu W
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















0














Regardless of what may be technically correct, if it doesn't sound right, then rephrase it:




Can you send me the flight information for you and Fred?







share|improve this answer




























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    0














    Regardless of what may be technically correct, if it doesn't sound right, then rephrase it:




    Can you send me the flight information for you and Fred?







    share|improve this answer


























      0














      Regardless of what may be technically correct, if it doesn't sound right, then rephrase it:




      Can you send me the flight information for you and Fred?







      share|improve this answer
























        0












        0








        0






        Regardless of what may be technically correct, if it doesn't sound right, then rephrase it:




        Can you send me the flight information for you and Fred?







        share|improve this answer












        Regardless of what may be technically correct, if it doesn't sound right, then rephrase it:




        Can you send me the flight information for you and Fred?








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 12 hours ago









        Jason Bassford

        15.6k31941




        15.6k31941















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