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There are several different style guides for writing the English language. When you follow the rules of The Associated Press Stylebook, Chris' is proper. With all other style guides, Chris's is correct.
To show possession using an apostrophe, add 's for individuals (\u201cSmith's car\u201d) and just the apostrophe after the s for plurals (\u201cthe Smiths' car\u201d). If a family name ends with an s or z, you can choose to use just the apostrophe (\u201cthe Williams' dog\u201d) or 's (\u201cthe Williams's dog\u201d).
James's car or James' car? Actually, both ways are correct. If a proper name ends with an s, you can add just the apostrophe or an apostrophe and an s. See the examples below for an illustration of this type of possessive noun.
The Smiths is plural for "Smith" and means there is more than one person named Smith and the invitation is from them all. When in doubt, we like to use "The Smith Family". The Smith's (with an apostrophe before the s) is the possessive of "Smith" and indicates one person ownership.
All you need is an \u201cs\u201d at the end of the name (Smiths, Johnsons). If you have trouble remembering whether the apostrophe is necessary, think of your message. For instance, if you mean to say, \u201cThe Smiths live here,\u201d then you don't need the apostrophe on the sign or that sentence.
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You'll see both versions. I recommend you say and write James's books.
James' birthday, or James's. The proper convention is to include the possessive apostrophe even when the word ends in an \u201cs.\u201d So \u201cJames's\u201d is correct. The only exception to that are proper nouns so well established that traditionally they have always been used with just an apostrophe.
Names are proper nouns, which become plurals the same way that other nouns do: add the letter -s for most names (\u201cthe Johnsons,\u201d \u201cthe Websters\u201d) or add -es if the name ends in s or z (\u201cthe Joneses,\u201d \u201cthe Martinezes\u201d).
The plural of Smith is Smiths. NOT Smith's. And if for some reason the Smiths wanted to use the possessive, they would have to use the plural possessive.
To form the possessive of a noun that ends in S, AP style has separate rules for proper names and generic nouns. For proper names like James, AP says, add an apostrophe only: He borrowed James' car. For generics like boss, add an apostrophe plus S: He borrowed the boss's car.

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