If it is one car - you would use "The car's beams" - If it is more than one car, you would use "The cars beams"
No, you do not need an apostrophe in that sentence. "Cousins" is used as a plural noun, not a possessive, so no apostrophe is required.
Fuse or bulbs burned out. On most they are separate bulbs or high beam filament is broken if 2 in 1 bulbs.
Yes. It actually depends on what you are trying to say. If you are referring to something that belongs to a mother, as in, for example, "My mother's car is green", then mother would have an apostrophe in it. However, if you are referring to more than one mother, for example "There are a lot of mothers at the game", then mothers will not have an apostrophe in it. But if you want to talk about something that belongs to more than one mother, for example "All the mothers' cars are green", it would get an apostrophe at the end of mothers.
Both expressions show possession. The apostrophe before the s indicates singular posession and the apostrophe after the s indicates plural possession. Example: the car's bumper (singular); the cars' bumpers (plural)
Dispite when it's sunny out...When others cars pass. It's polite.
No. It's in its plural form like "cars" or "baseballs". If you were referring to an event that happens on Wednesdays, then yes, it would be plural ("Wednesday's meeting")...
tyndall effect
Most cars: Pull your turn signal towards you.
Parking Lights or low Beams.
The possessive form of the plural noun cars is cars'.The possessive of all plural English nouns ending in -s is formed by adding an apostrophe after the ending -s.
learn to spell, or else you would have already gotten one-million answers. now search it.
It should either be on the dash board where you can turn your interior lights on or you should pull back on the directional to switch. Cars run with the low beams on and the high beams are switched to in the dark when you feel you need extra light. I feel bad for the people that have been coming in the other direction from this car if its high beams have been on constantly.