Well I can't tell because you haven't written the question :P
Yes, the correct form is "Does it have an apostrophe for possession?"
The correct placement of the apostrophe before "09" in a contraction of "2009" is at the beginning: '09.
The correct sentence would be:This is Luke's book.If Luke ended in an s, the apostrophe would be after the s ; since it doesn't, an apostrophe and then an s must be added for possession.Example: Jesus' disciples, John's disciples....
You should never put its' in a sentence. The correct possessive form of "it" is "its", without an apostrophe. While "its'" is never used, "it's" is a contraction of "it is" or "it has".
No, it is not correct to use an apostrophe after the 's' in the word years in this sentence. The correct way to write it would be "She has almost 30 years of experience in teaching languages."
yes it is
Yes.
No. It should be Neil Armstrong's footprint.
Well I can't tell because you haven't written the question :P
No. It isn't needed there.
You don't have an apostrophe in your sentence. You don't need one either.
It is correct where you put it.
Yes, the apostrophe is in the correct place. "Their" is possessive, indicating that the book belongs to them, and the apostrophe comes before the s to show possession. So, "their book's" is correct.
If you capitalize the first letter of the sentence and place a period at the end, use an apostrophe for the contraction for 'it's', it is a correct sentence: It's going to be a great night today. Although correct as a sentence, it would make more sense if it said: It's going to be a great night tonight.
The correct placement would be "locals' favorite place" as the apostrophe indicates possession by multiple locals.
the dinosaurs' heads there i think.
The correct way to write the sentence is: "The students' books are on his desk." The apostrophe is placed after the "s" in "students" to show that the books belong to the students.