Yes... Jane's book
The contraction of we had is we'd.The apostrophe is the little superscript punctuation mark between the e and the d.Additional answerIt's not correct to ask 'what is the apostrophe of we had'. It should be 'what is the contraction of we had'. The apostrophe is a punctuation mark that (amongst other things) denotes that a letter has been removed.
It's an accent, not an apostrophe. It's been borrowed from French. It's called an accent aigu.
Donahues' (with the apostrophe after the name).In the singular possessive, the apostrophe should come between the e and s. (That hamster is Phil Donahue's.) In the plural, you first add the s, then the apostrophe, so That house is the Donahues'.For words that end in an s the singular posessive form is s', so "Jesus' sandals are well worn." The plural form of words ending in s is es. (Jesus Lopez and Jesus Fernandez are known as the Jesuses.) To make that word possessive, it's "The Jesuses' jacked-up car was stolen."
Je m'appelle Sandro. Apostrophes are used in French only to take the place of missing letters in contractions. The example given means literally, "I call me (or myself) Sandro." "M'appelle" is a contraction for "me" and "appelle" and the apostrophe takes the place of the dropped "e".
no it isn
No, the correct spelling is Pele without an apostrophe. The use of the accent mark over the 'e' in Pele is to ensure the correct pronunciation of the name.
When deciding where the apostrophe goes to show possession, follow these steps: Add the apostrophe + s ('s) after the singular noun to show possession (e.g., the dog's tail). Add the apostrophe after the plural noun ending in s to show possession (e.g., the girls' shoes). Add the apostrophe + s ('s) after the plural noun not ending in s to show possession (e.g., the children's toys).
No it is an accent over the e of Pele.
CHARGE
"Mr. Belgrave's appeal was heard" i would thnk it would go there. Depending upon whether the man's name is "Mr. Belgrave" or "Mr. Belgraves", I can tell you where the apostrophe should be inserted: NAME: "Mr. Belgrave" - apostrophe would be inserted following the final letter "e", then followed by a letter "s" to show possession, as in the suggestion given above. NAME: "Mr. Belgraves" - apostrophe would be inserted after the ending letter "s" to show possession, contrary to the first example given by someone else above other than by me.
Some clothing items ending with e :blousecapetie
CorrineDarleneJustineLouanneLee AnneMarlene
Beetle, Bee, Termite.
Bridge
The apostrophe after a name, such as "Jeffs'," is used to show possession when a plural noun already ends in "s." This is applicable when indicating that something belongs to multiple people or objects with names ending in "s," like the belongings of the multiple individuals with the last name "Jeffs."
The phrase "que tal" is a fixed expression in Spanish and doesn't require an apostrophe. It is used to ask "how are you?" or "how is it going?" in informal contexts. So, you would just write it as "que tal" without any apostrophe.
ullage