it would be student's because students implies more than one student and if you are talking about more than one student's mother it would be the students' mothers
An apostrophe indicates possession or attribute (something about a noun).The singular is student's -- belonging to a student (e.g. the student's locker).The plural is students' -- belonging to more than one (e.g. the students' lockers).
Neither is correct. You would say "There are no students" or "There is not one student" or "There are not any students."
You would write it as one-thousand, one-hundred and twenty-five.
奶奶 Paternal Mother = Dad's mother, also grandma Ma ma (but the tones go down, so it's not a flat "ma" but rather one that starts neutral and ends low.)
The mother of one of your grandparents is your great-grandmother.The colloquial is "great-grandma" e.g. "Great-grandma Smith."
There isn't one universal African language, so there isn't a single way to spell "mother" in an African language. It would depend on which specific African language you are referring to.
The plural is students. Apostrophes are almost never used to form plurals.The possessive for one student is student's and the possessive for a bunch of students would be students' (only the apostrophe).Examples:There are several students.One student's bike is missing.All of the students' bikes are parked in the same place.
apparently the one that has students who cant spell college correctly.
There is no one-word anagram. *With one less T, it would spell "indicate."
An apostrophe indicates possession or attribute (something about a noun).The singular is student's -- belonging to a student (e.g. the student's locker).The plural is students' -- belonging to more than one (e.g. the students' lockers).
Fifty-one.
1 million is not a fraction and so it is difficult to see how one would spell it. It is like asking how you would spell your name as a fraction!
If you mean how does one spell 'serious' using chatspeak, that would be SRS.
A great aunt because your grandmother's (mother's mother) sister would be your mother's aunt and one generation back would make them a great
amog dag suayIt is to be hoped that no one has taken the above for a serious answer. The words are nonsense.There is no Swahili word for spell-check. Students teachers, and i.t. personnel would almost certainly use the English: Hakikisha umespellcheck jibu lako (Be sure you have "spell-checked" your answer), something the first contributor certainly didn't do.
Neither is correct. You would say "There are no students" or "There is not one student" or "There are not any students."
"Most any laptop will do for students. A lot of students carry brands such as Dell, Hp, Apple, Sony Vaios, and Macbooks. All of these would be a good choice for students."