Learn English – Possessive apostrophe in “teams’ time”

apostrophepossessives

In this sentence:

Used by companies to manage their teams' time.

Is that the correct possessive usage on teams?

Does it matter if a company has more than one team or not? (I assume it does not.)

I understand the usage with plurals and possessives in isolation (and have reviewed those examples). Most people I've asked have said it can be either but I still feel like team's in this case is wrong. The question is if "companies", plural, means that "teams" is made plural (even if each company only had one team). E.g., it seems more clear if you change it to something like "used by people to manage their dogs' time". I'm not sure if it's because "team" is a collective noun that causes some doubt.

Best Answer

I would argue that if it is one team you are speaking of, the correct form is "team's time"

If you are referring to multiple teams, then "teams' time"

The word itself is in singular form, not its plural form (that would be "teams"), even though a team usually is comprised of multiple individuals.

Other similar examples: "Congress's time" "the committee's time" etc...

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