no you wouldn't
No, you do not need to use an apostrophe in the sentence "I have two cousins." Apostrophes are typically used to show possession or to indicate missing letters in contractions.
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.
Apostrophe s is used to indicate possession for nouns. For pronouns it is used exclusively to indicate the omission of a letter.So you might refer to your cousin's car, but "cousins for life" implies a friendship between multiple (plural) cousins. There would not be an apostrophe there.
You can use two possessive nouns in a sentence by making sure the first noun is followed by an apostrophe and 's (e.g. John's) and the second noun is followed by just an apostrophe (e.g. Mary' ) to show ownership. For example, "John's and Mary's cars are parked in the driveway."
If you are referring to possession, use the apostrophe: "The TV's screen was cracked." If you are referring to multiple TVs, use the plural form without an apostrophe: "There were two TVs in the living room."
We use an apostrophe to show possession (such as "John's car") and to indicate contractions (such as "can't" instead of "cannot").
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.
Apostrophe s is used to indicate possession for nouns. For pronouns it is used exclusively to indicate the omission of a letter.So you might refer to your cousin's car, but "cousins for life" implies a friendship between multiple (plural) cousins. There would not be an apostrophe there.
It is appropriate in some situations. There are two ways to use "its": as a possessive or as a contraction. When you use it as a possessive, there is no apostrophe. For example: The dog wants its bone. When you use it as a contraction, you use "it's." For example: It's my cookie. The sentence could also be read as it "It is my cookie;" therefore, "it's" is a contraction in this sentence and requires an apostrophe.
Yes. 'Its' in that sentence is short for 'it is' so it should have an apostrophe.
example:Death,where is thy sting?
The apostrophe in the word Billy's means Billy's ownership of something.
You can use two possessive nouns in a sentence by making sure the first noun is followed by an apostrophe and 's (e.g. John's) and the second noun is followed by just an apostrophe (e.g. Mary' ) to show ownership. For example, "John's and Mary's cars are parked in the driveway."
Meet me in the engineer's office.
yes
It was the two countries' mutual agreement that allowed them to expand their economy exponentially.(this is a plural possessive, as shown by the apostrophe)
Example sentence - We will be stopping at our cousins house while on vacation.
The term it's is a contraction of the words it is with an apostrophe, and is often confused with its, which means the possession of a thing, but without an apostrophe.