Not if you're talking about more than one monkey. You use an apostrophe to make a noun possessive. The monkey's behavior is odd, for example.
The plural is monkeys. The monkeys were kept in cages. The plural possessive is monkeys'. The monkeys' cages were dirty.
It is because sea-monkeys are a special type of brine shrimp that have tails and have an odd behavior similar to monkeys behavior.
Spider monkeys eat food Spider monkeys eat food
Yes,cats are scared of monkeys
you have had two monkeys
NO
"Volkswagen" doesn't require an apostrophe.
The apostrophe goes before the "o" in "Archaeologist" to indicate the missing letters in the word "Archaeology." The correct spelling is "Archaeologist."
No "events" is the plural of "event" and doesn't require an apostrophe.
Between the a and the a in Veronicas
The word monkey is a common singular noun. It requires no apostrophe.The monkey liked his food.If the word monkey has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.The monkey's food sat uneaten.The plural is monkeys; plural possessive is monkeys', such as monkeys' food.
The possessive form of "the hammer of neither" would be "neither's hammer." The apostrophe goes before the "s" to show ownership by "neither."
"Companies" is the plural "company" and doesn't require an apostrophe unless you are using a plural possessive. With the plural possessive, the apostrophe should appear at the end of the word after the 's'.
Outside of text messaging and casual speech, "gotta" isn't a word. No, it doesn't need an apostrophe.
You can't use congratulations with an apostrophe.
Most normal usage of the word "experiences" will not require an apostrophe because the (s) is signifying plurality rather than possession.
No, the sentence "She has almost 30 years experience" does not require an apostrophe after the s in the word years. The word "years" is used as a plural noun in this context, describing the duration of experience, so no apostrophe is needed.