If the '24' in question is a player on a team wearing the number 24 then yes, you need an apostrophe in "24's Mom." The apostrophe in that position indicates the 'Mom' belongs to 24.
Yes, you do because the apostrophe, in this case, shows belonging. The name belongs to your mom.
It should be Eva's mom which means the mom of Eva.
The use of an apostrophe , mom's , shows possession .
Moms. Note: No apostrophe.
No, the form mom's is the possessive form of the singular noun mom. The 'sindicates that something belongs to mom.Example: My mom's car is a black Honda.The form mom's may also be a contraction for "mom is".Example: My mom is picking us up at two. OR: My mom's picking us up at two.The plural form of the noun mom is moms (no apostrophe).
yes
There are two accepted forms for possessive singular nouns ending in s:Add an apostrophe (') after the existing s at the end of the word: Jesus'Add an apostrophe s ('s) after the existing s at the end of the word: Jesus'sExamples:Jesus' mom made a cake for his birthday.Jesus's mom made a cake for his birthday.
It's mom's birthday. 'It is' is a contraction, so it gets an apostrophe. And 'mom's' is posessive, so it gets one too.
The possessive noun for "mom" is "mom's." It indicates ownership or association, such as in the phrase "mom's book," where the book belongs to the mom.
We'll is the contraction for we will. "We'll go see the movie after I finish cleaning," mom said to her son.
An apostrophe signifies possession - the thing belongs to the person pr people named So If my mother has a car then - my mother's car = my mom's car If my mother is a member of a committee made up of other mothers, then the committee she is on might be "The Moms' Committee" For one mother - the apostrophe goes before the s, for a group of mothers the apostrophe goes after the s.
Mama