Yes, it two years' experience
Whenever you're wondering whether a phrase like this needs an apostrophe, try mentally substituting "one" for "two" (or whatever other number is in the phrase you're wondering about). "Two years' experience" and "two years experience" sound the same -- but "one year's experience" and "one year experience" are easy to tell apart. And of course you'd say "one year's experience." You'd also say "one week's notice" and "one dollar's worth." Just remember, when it's a plural, put the apostrophe after the "s," where it belongs on a plural possessive.
No, "two years" does not require an apostrophe. "Two" is used as an adjective to describe "years." The apostrophe is only used to indicate possession or contraction, not for a simple plural form.
If it's sister's, it only applys to one person eg-her sister's comingif it has an apostrophe after the s(sisters') it means that it applies to more than one thing or object eg- the horses' tails were all long (talking about more then one horse)
the plural for quay is quay's :DNo, the plural for quay is quays - no apostrophe. An apostrophe indicates either a possessive or a contraction - not a plural.This applies even for words that end in a vowel (eg the plural of bee is bees, not bee's) and for abbreviations (eg the plural od DVD is DVDs, not DVD's).Don't use apostrophes in plurals!
The apostrophe in "master's" indicates possession, showing that something belongs to the master. It is used in this context to show that the degree or qualification is owned by or awarded to the individual who holds it.
Between the d and v eg: 'I wish you could've come to the party' Although I think this is more conversational English, if I was going to write it, I would write it without the contraction.
When the name does not end in s, one should use 's. eg) Mr Smith's pen. This is the same as any apostrophe of posession, eg) the cat's whiskers. When the name does end in an s, the rule is exactly the same. eg) Mr. Jones's pen. James's watch. You never add s' to show possession. If the word is a plural formed with an s, such as baskets or buffaloes, the possessive is indicated by adding an apostrophe alone eg) the baskets' handles, the buffaloes' horns.
The girl's dress.
A conjunction is when two words are put together to form one, usually with an apostrophe eg. has + not = hasn't I + am = I'm we + are = we're
-4 + (-2) can also be inscribed as, -4 - 2 . Therefore the answer would be -6 +(+)= (+) - (+)= (-) - (-) = (+) eg/. -6 + (-4) = -6 - 4 = -10 eg/. -6 - (-4) = -6 + 4 = -2 Just remember that two of the same sign will always make a positive. This is only true in mathematics, don't be hom0 ;)
The apostrophe is the superscripted comma ('). On my keyboard it shares with @.Its purpose in grammar is to :Indicate missing letters eg it's for it is, aren'tfor are notorIndicate the possessive case eg The boy's bike ie The bike of the boy
No. To is a preposition. A possessive noun usually has an apostrophe (') eg dog's, doctor's
to indicate possession as in "Fred's pen" to fill the space left by a letter omitted in a contraction eg doesn't in full is does not, the apostrophe takes the place of the missing o
'twas (contraction of it was) eg, 'Twas the night before Christmas, ...
As county's (if one wishes to indicate possesion). eg Lancaster was originally the county's administrative headquarters or county town. There is no other reason to use an apostrophe.
If it's sister's, it only applys to one person eg-her sister's comingif it has an apostrophe after the s(sisters') it means that it applies to more than one thing or object eg- the horses' tails were all long (talking about more then one horse)
If it's one Aussie - the word is Aussie's - as in "The Aussie's dropped he ball again". If it's more than one Aussie - the apostrophe is 'implied' - as in "The Aussies lost again"Aussies's can have an apostrophe but there shouldn't be an s after the apostrophe.Aussie's is the possessive singular form of Aussie. eg The Aussie's dog is missing. - here - 's - shows the dog belongs to the Aussie (one Aussie).Aussies is the plural form of Aussie and means more than one. eg The Aussies lost the game.Aussies' is the plural possessive form of Aussie. eg The Aussies' fullback was hopeless.There is no implied apostrophe.
The apostrophe in "master's" indicates possession, showing that something belongs to the master. It is used in this context to show that the degree or qualification is owned by or awarded to the individual who holds it.
Greek words usually may have a "ph" instead of an "f" eg. hyphen. They may also end with the letter "e" e.g apostrophe. Some english words with greek origin may have an "o" (which has a schwa sound) that joins two parts of the words eg astronomy.