I understand what the sentence The house is a full day’s journey from here means, but I’m wondering what day’s is short for in this expression. It doesn’t match any pattern I know.
A couple of examples:
- He’s = he is
- Let’s = let us
- Mary’s car = the car belongs to Mary
- Day’s = it sounds to me like something belongs to a day and this is what I don’t understand. Shouldn’t it be The house is a full day of journey from here instead?
The house is a full day its journey from here. We then contractday itstoday's. This may be controversial, as to the why, but thesingle apostrophe ruledoes help with the what (where/when to use apostrophes). http://richarddelorenzi.wordpress.com/2014/01/09/a-single-rule-for-apostrophes/ – ctrl-alt-delor Jan 09 '14 at 09:05'r. Or you could say that we truncateMary hers car, though we are stretching the grammar. – ctrl-alt-delor Jan 10 '14 at 09:12