Yes, it is "doesn't"
"Yo'" has an apostrophe because it is a shortened form of "your". The apostrophe represents the missing letters u and r.
A shorter way to say "he will" is "he'll." In the English language when you use an apostrophe with a pronoun, the letters that follow are a shortened form of some other word, such as "it's" is not the possessive form of "it" but is "it is." "He'll" is the condensed form of "he will."
Yes, the plural form of apostrophe is "apostrophes".
No, the plural form of "day" is "days" and does not require an apostrophe. An apostrophe is used to show possession or contraction, not to form plurals.
The plural form of "apostrophe" is "apostrophes."
Did you mean "Does believes have an apostrophe?" No, it doesn't.
The singular possessive form of the noun "it" is "its". Note that there is no apostrophe in the possessive form of "it". The apostrophe is only used after "it" when used as a contraction of "it is".
No, the apostrophe in "it's" is incorrect. The correct form is "its" without an apostrophe, as "its" is the possessive form of "it."
No, "designers" does not have an apostrophe. The correct possessive form would be "designers'."
Acronyms do not utilize the apostrophe in the plural form.
The plural of governor is governors (no apostrophe necessary). The plural possessive form of governor is governors'.
Not unless it has an apostrophe in the middle.The word were is a past tense form of the verb "to be" (we were, you were, they were).The apostrophe form we're (pronounced weer) is a contraction of "we are."