Want this question answered?
Apostrophe is placed after the letter z in names ending in this letter. Example: Mr. Sanchez' office or Mr. Sanchez's office
Neither, it would be written The Oswalts - with no apostrophe. Plurals don't need apostrophes. If something belongs to you, use an apostrophe. The Oswalt's house.
Last Names could be anything so your question isn't valid.You could just put some letters together and it could be a last name and probably is somewhere.
Yes, you do because the apostrophe, in this case, shows belonging. The name belongs to your mom.
1. If its is used as a possessive noun, then there is no need for an apostrophe. Example: its name 2. If its is to be used as a contraction of the words it is, the there should be an apostrophe. it is: it's
No, unless your name has an apostrophe in it or you are using it in the possessive.
No, you do not need to use an apostrophe in a last name if it is not possessive.
Torres'
For autographs, she writes her initials. SMG
Please write a name rather than initials for an answer.
Yes an apostrophe is needed after the letter z of a person's last name if it indicates a possession. Example: Jessica Sanchez' golden voice.
You can either add an apostrophe followed by an additional s (e.g., Charles's book) or just an apostrophe after the s (e.g., Charles' book). Both forms are considered correct, but some style guides prefer one over the other.
The correct way to write degree initials after your name it depends what kind of degree do you have if it is a Bachelor degree it is most time in all caps for example BS or BA.
The first letter of your first, middle, and last name, in that order. If your name was John Robert Smith, your initials would be JRS.
To show possession for a last name ending in "z," you still add an apostrophe and an "s" ('s). For example, for the last name "Gomez," you would write "Gomez's car" to show possession.
it is the first letter in your first, second, and last name
The word you're looking for is "initials."