It should be John Smith IV's .
You can use apostrophes to indicate possession for most nouns. For possessive pronouns, however, an apostrophe is not required.Example:James's socksJill's fistHis socksHer fist
The possessive is the standard form - playmate's - and the possessive of the plural can use only the apostrophe - playmates' - in accordance with standard usage.
Series is a noun that has the same form in the singular and the plural. There is no need for an apostrophe, unless it is in the possessive case: series's for the singular possessive and series' for the plural possessive.
You would use the apostrophe because it is possessive. Gavin and Jedine's Wedding
plural? --- It's called a plural possessive.
No, but its without the apostrophe is the correct, the singular possessive form of the pronoun it. Pronouns do not use an apostrophe to show possession.The plural of it is they/them.The possessive of they is their/theirs.example: Mr Smith is their teacher. And that classroom is theirs.
In: Mike is a friend of Mr. Smith. The possessive of replaces the possessive 's in: Mike is Mr. Smith's friend.
The correct form is "its" for the possessive form in the plural. "Its" is used for both the singular and plural possessive forms, without an apostrophe.
A possessive pronoun uses an apostrophe to show possession, such as "one's" or "someone's."
Plural possessive is "their" Possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe.
Yes, you would use an apostrophe after the plural "forefathers" to indicate possession. The correct form would be "forefathers'."
You can use apostrophes to indicate possession for most nouns. For possessive pronouns, however, an apostrophe is not required.Example:James's socksJill's fistHis socksHer fist
Yes, you would put an apostrophe after the z when making it possessive. For example, "The dog's leash" would be correct.
When it is a possessive, use apostrophe. The waitress's coat was stolen. The waitresses' paychecks were cut.
No, "candidates" does not require an apostrophe before the "s" because it is a plural noun, not possessive.
The possessive is the standard form - playmate's - and the possessive of the plural can use only the apostrophe - playmates' - in accordance with standard usage.
An apostrophe at the end of a word usually indicates that letters have been omitted to indicate a contraction, such as "can't" for "cannot" or "won't" for "will not." It can also indicate possession when used before the letter "s", such as "Sarah's book."