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
The contraction is spelled we're.
The contraction of "does not" is spelled "doesn't". The apostrophe takes the place of the "o" from "not".
That is the correct spelling of "apostrophe" (the punctuation mark ' ).
The contraction for "they are" is spelled "they're." It combines the words "they" and "are" by replacing the "a" in "are" with an apostrophe.
No, "new beginnings" does not require an apostrophe. An apostrophe is used to indicate possession or a contraction, but in this case, "new beginnings" simply refers to multiple instances of beginnings that are new, so it is correctly written without an apostrophe.
No they are not spelled with an apostrophe.
no
No, it is spelled: policemen.
It accents how it is pornounced, but "Halloween" is usually spelled without the apostrophe in it.
The contraction is spelled we're.
learnings is spelled without an apostrophe just as in teachings.
It it means an ownership of Monet, an apostrophe is needed. Example: Monet's bag
No, the word is spelled "employees" that's correct.
None, Halloween is spelled Halloween
The contraction of "does not" is spelled "doesn't". The apostrophe takes the place of the "o" from "not".
The chain of coffee shops is spelled Starbucks. (no apostrophe)
That is the correct spelling of "apostrophe" (the punctuation mark ' ).