NO when adding an apostrophe you only use it if you're implying that its something they own
EX 1
That was Aj's phone!
EX 2
That phone was Aj's!
The Wrong WAY
That phone was Ajs!
No, you do not need to add an apostrophe when making a last name plural by adding an "s." Just add the "s" directly to the end of the last name.
To make a last name plural that already ends in "s," simply add an apostrophe after the "s," as in "the Joneses' house." This is because the apostrophe alone signifies plural possession.
To make a word plural, typically just add an "s" at the end. Use an apostrophe only when indicating possession or in contractions, not for pluralization. For example, "dogs" is the plural of "dog," and "dog's" shows possession.
No, the word "status" is made plural by adding an "es" without an apostrophe. The correct plural form is "statuses."
To make a last name ending in S possessive, add an apostrophe after the S. For example, "Jones'" is the possessive form of the last name Jones.
To make a last name that ends in "y" plural, you typically change the "y" to "ies" and add an apostrophe "s." For example, if the last name is Murphy, the plural form would be Murphies'.
To make a last name plural that already ends in "s," simply add an apostrophe after the "s," as in "the Joneses' house." This is because the apostrophe alone signifies plural possession.
To make a word plural, typically just add an "s" at the end. Use an apostrophe only when indicating possession or in contractions, not for pluralization. For example, "dogs" is the plural of "dog," and "dog's" shows possession.
No, the word "status" is made plural by adding an "es" without an apostrophe. The correct plural form is "statuses."
The correct placement for the apostrophe in the word "fellows" is "fellow's." This indicates possession by one fellow.
To make a last name ending in S possessive, add an apostrophe after the S. For example, "Jones'" is the possessive form of the last name Jones.
To make a plural, simply add an S. Character becomes characters. Remember that if you add an apostrophe, you make it a possessive, not plural.
No. The plural form is businesses. Apostrophes make possessives, not plurals.
To make "telephone" plural possessive, you would add an apostrophe after the "s" in "telephones" if there is more than one telephone being discussed. For example, "The telephones' cords were tangled."
To make the plural noun "meteors" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: meteors'
To make the plural noun "days" possessive, you add an apostrophe after the "s" without an additional "s". For example, "two days' notice" or "seven days' worth of work."
The plural possessive is others'. You simply add an apostrophe to a plural ending in 's' to make it possessive.
Neither. The apostrophe is not used with a plural. This is a common mistake.It is not even correct to make the plural numbers using an apostrophe. For example, it is not correct to write the 1980's, but the correct form is the 1980s.