Apostrofa
No there shouldn't be an apostrophe.
The apostrophe indicates possession. So, no apostrophe.
If you mean a Spanish word, it would be "llamas" (see the comment below about the apostrophe). This could be a form of the verb "llamar" (to call). it could also be the plural of a noun "llama" which can mean either flame or the animal that we also call llama. The apostrophe is generally not used in Spanish. never for possessive (as we say "Bob's house." Also Spanish does not use the apostrophe in contractions (as "can't" and "don't" in English). A book in Spanish might occasionally use the apostrophe in dialog to show that the speaker drops syllables, as "pa'" in place of "para."
won'tAdditional answerIt's not true to say that won't is in an apostrophe. Apostrophe is the little comma that goes into words where one or more letters have been omitted and won't is the contracted form of will not.^I think they know what an apostrophe is! They were asking what 'will not' was when it was shortened with an apostrophe.
Yes
No. That must be in spanish.
No, says does not need an apostrophe. It's the present tense third person singular conjugation of the verb "say".
No: the correct form is "it's hers". "Hers" does not have an apostrophe.
Yes, you do because the apostrophe, in this case, shows belonging. The name belongs to your mom.
it depends on if your going to say an something like experiment`s result or experiments` results
Yes, in the phrase "last year's party," you should use an apostrophe to show possession. The apostrophe indicates that the party belongs to last year.
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.