The house belongs to Dave. It should be Dave's house.
Gates-Daves House was created in 1841.
My father's house. The apostrophe shows that your father is in possession of the house.
No. Possessive pronouns don't take apostrophes.
It should be Mr. and Mrs. Smith's house.
The apostrophe floating on its own at the end of a word is not usually correct in the singular form, and it is certainly incorrect in "house' directions". Write instead "house directions". If the plural is required, the apostrophe at the end of a word is correct. For example, when seeking the directions to a group of houses, it is correct (though somewhat awkward) to write houses' directions.
Use an apostrophes as in a professional name like St. Mark's House not if you are only saying Marks house.
You can find Evil Dave's house in Edgeville, if you look at the house across from the bank.
Yes, if you were saying, for example, Bob's house, you would add an apostrphe.
do evil daves part on recipe for disaster, if you have completed it already go to evil daves house in edgeville and kill a couple hell mice and it will automatically turn into one
No. Not until he was out of the house and still after that she treated that she would find him.
If it is a single house, then the sentence is incorrect. If house is singular, the apostrophe should go before the s, with the sentence reading "The house's furniture was simple." The way the sentence reads now, it suggests plural houses.
An apostrophe is used to show possession: the house belongs to the Robinsons; therefore, it is the Robinsons's house. Our house (or ours - no apostrophe) is on Randolph Drive. Randolph is the name of the drive; it doesn't belong to anybody in this sentence. Of course, the sentence should be:"The Robinsons' house is on Spring Street but ours is on Randolph Drive" as "ours" is a possessive but is an exception. Unfortunately the Wiki spell checker doesn't know the correct usage either. Sigh.