a 2-month's leave/a 2 month's leave

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Sarah18

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Feb 8, 2017
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Russian
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Russian Federation
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Georgia
Hello!

Which is correct a 2-month's leave, a 2 month's leave, 2 months leave. I think it is the first.

Thank you
 
two months' leave
 
Or a two-month leave. We use a singular noun in compound adjectives like this.

It's not right in BrE to say 'take a leave' so two-month leave would not work.
 
It's not right in BrE to say 'take a leave' so two-month leave would not work.

That's interesting. It's natural in American English to take a qualified leave, but I don't think it works to just "take a leave". You could take a leave of two months or a short leave but you would not normally say you were simply taking a leave.
 
That's interesting. It's natural in American English to take a qualified leave, but I don't think it works to just "take a leave". You could take a leave of two months or a short leave but you would not normally say you were simply taking a leave.

Confusingly, take a leave of absence sounds okay.
 
Here are a few ways we express the idea of time off work in BrE.

I'm taking leave.
I'm taking some leave.
I'm on leave.
I'm on two months' leave.
I'm taking two months' leave.

I'm taking a two-month holiday from work. (The assumption is that you're on leave but we wouldn't say "I'm taking a two-month leave"). I would probably express that as "I'm taking two months off work".
 
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