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Should I write each "team's", "teams" or "team" captain?

English Language & Usage Asked by Pacopaco on April 5, 2021

I’m writing about the captains of sport teams. Each team has one and only one captain. I’m confused on how to express this :

We will communicate this information to …

  • each team captain
  • each team’s captain
  • each teams captain
  • each teams’ captain

It’s my understanding that each is followed by a singular as per https://dictionary.cambridge.org/fr/grammaire/grammaire-britannique/each, so I think I should use captain against captains (I could be wrong on this one too, though)

However, I’m confused with the “team” part. There are several teams, so should I pluralize this word here ? Also, maybe should I use the possessive 's ?

Which is the correct way to complete the sentence ?

2 Answers

It should be each team’s captain, because each implies you’re talking about each of several teams individually, so you can use team’s as the singular possessive.

Correct answer by Nick on April 5, 2021

After two different investigations and the testing of approximately 200 cookie-drink-combinations Fisher announced the teams’ findings.

Answered by Poop on April 5, 2021

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