the mayor of New York's

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GeneD

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Here they say that the possessive for "the mayor of New York" is "the mayor of New York's". It's sounds strange to me, and that's a non-native English speaking site... What do you think of it? Is that way to make a possessive correct?
 
It's correct.
 
That construction can feel awkward to native speakers, too. You will often see it avoided by saying, for example, The office of the Mayor of New York.
 
You can say:

- the mayor of New York's office
- the mayor of New York's staff
- the mayor of New York's duties

You can also say:

- the New York mayor's office
- the New York mayor's staff
- the New York mayor's duties
 
The Mayor of New Yorks' office is the office of the Mayor of New York​.

I'm having one of those very tired days where I don't trust my own eyesight or judgement but isn't your apostrophe in the wrong place?!
 
I'm having one of those very tired days where I don't trust my own eyesight or judgement but isn't your apostrophe in the wrong place?!
The apostrophe is a catastrophy.
 
I've recently seen "What a catostrophe!" as the caption on several online images of disastrously-placed apostrophes on public signs. (Piscean's wasn't in that league!)
 
I once saw a cartoon of the back half of a cat mounted on a plaque hanging on a wall with a bunch of deer heads. The caption: Cat ass trophy.

Had to share.
 
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