only if something belongs to a specific town. if you are talking about multiple towns, then you don't.
-the town's streets are very narrow.
-there are several small towns in the lost city of atlantis. lol
Pangea is considered the first known supercontinent.
Pangea is considered the first known supercontinent.
You need to do your homework and test. We don't do your homework. WHOEVER PUT THIS YOU NEED TO SHUT UP AND DONT PUT NUN IF U GONE SAY ALL THIS MESSY JUNK.
No. In your example, the word "since" is used as a conjunction, like the word "but" or the word "and" so no comma is required. However, if you reversed the order of the phrases, you would need a comma to separate them, e.g., "Since she works nearby, we decided to meet there."
A boy compass? You shouldn't need a compass to find a boy ... half the population is male! Maybe put it in your purse so you can find it easily?
Personally, no. But it's not incorrect to put the apostrophe.
Before the 's'.
Well obviously, you put it after!!
you put an apostrophe after the N and before the T.
after the t (it's) You put an apostrophe on 'its' if it's a contraction of "it is." Otherwise, 'its' has no apostrophe because that's its nature.
Put the apostrophe in mices right after s.: mices'
No apostrophe is to be putted in this sentence.
The word o'clock is is a contraction, reduced from "of the clock."
"Volkswagen" doesn't require an apostrophe.
The apostrophe in "cyclist" would be placed before the last letter when indicating possession: cyclist's.
If you wanted to say "nieces" as a plural, such as "I have two nieces", then it wouldn't need an apostrophe. If you wanted to say something like "My niece's teddybear", showing singular possession, then you would need an apostrophe. The word nieces is a plural noun. If you want to use it as a plural possessive noun then put an apostrophe at the end - nieces' My nieces' husbands are both doctors.
no matter what you usually have to put a period after an apostrophe because it's the end of a sentence.