@sjw @lanodan
The correct word to use is "Jews" talking about a plural of Jew. The apostrophe is used when sounds or letters are being skipped such as "where is" becoming "where's" or "where did" becoming "where'd". In the alternative, you can sometimes use an apostrophe as a possessive, such as writer's tears.
The caption using the one syntax would be interpreted as "goodbye jew is goodbye" which isn't meaningful, or "goodbye to the goodbye owned by the jews" which is a bizarre statement.
Moreover, nouns and adjectives referring to religious or national groups are always capitalized in English.
So as a grammar Nazi I have no choice but to invade Poland.
The correct word to use is "Jews" talking about a plural of Jew. The apostrophe is used when sounds or letters are being skipped such as "where is" becoming "where's" or "where did" becoming "where'd". In the alternative, you can sometimes use an apostrophe as a possessive, such as writer's tears.
The caption using the one syntax would be interpreted as "goodbye jew is goodbye" which isn't meaningful, or "goodbye to the goodbye owned by the jews" which is a bizarre statement.
Moreover, nouns and adjectives referring to religious or national groups are always capitalized in English.
So as a grammar Nazi I have no choice but to invade Poland.