Yes, the plural form of apostrophe is "apostrophes".
The plural of governor is governors (no apostrophe necessary). The plural possessive form of governor is governors'.
The plural is composers and the plural possessive form is composers' (just an apostrophe added).
To form the possessive of a plural noun that ends with an s, place the apostrophe after the ending s: brothers'Example: My brothers' names are Jeff and Joe.
Yes, the plural form is employees; the plural possessive form is employees', for example the employees' entrance.
The possessive is the standard form - playmate's - and the possessive of the plural can use only the apostrophe - playmates' - in accordance with standard usage.
No, the plural form of an acronym does not have an apostrophe. Acronyms are treated as regular words, so adding an 's' at the end is sufficient to indicate their plural form.
The plural of governor is governors (no apostrophe necessary). The plural possessive form of governor is governors'.
To make a word plural, typically just add an "s" at the end. Use an apostrophe only when indicating possession or in contractions, not for pluralization. For example, "dogs" is the plural of "dog," and "dog's" shows possession.
The plural is Tuesdays. No apostrophe.
The correct form is "its" for the possessive form in the plural. "Its" is used for both the singular and plural possessive forms, without an apostrophe.
The plural of address is addresses and the plural possessive is addresses' (apostrophe only).
The plural possessive form of "school" is "schools'".
The plural is schools. The plural possessive form is schools' (apostrophe only).
The plural is composers and the plural possessive form is composers' (just an apostrophe added).
dimes [note: there is no apostrophe]
Yes, "Awards Day" does not have an apostrophe. The term is a straightforward plural noun, so no possessive form is needed.
The plural form of the acronym ATM is ATMs.The plural possessive form is ATMs',The plural possessive form would be ATMs'. Since an "s" is added because of the plurality, the rule states that the apostrophe goes after the "s" to show possession.