No, there is no apostrophe after the 's' in "Grandparents Day." The term is already possessive with the 's' indicating that the day is dedicated to all grandparents.
The apostrophe in "your grandparents' home" would indicate possession, showing that the home belongs to your grandparents. It comes after the "s" to show plural possession.
My grandparents' house was burglarized.I inherited my grandparents' 1946 car.Children need their grandparents' attention.A child's grandparents' wisdom and guidance are often useful.
The apostrophe should be placed as follows: "your grandparents' farm." This indicates that the farm belongs to your grandparents.
No, the word "grandparents" does not require an apostrophe. The plural form is used without any punctuation marks.
The correct placement is "women's pensions" with the apostrophe before the 's'. This indicates that the pensions belong to the women. Placing the apostrophe after the 's' would indicate possession by multiple women, which is not the intended meaning in this context.
The apostrophe in "your grandparents' home" would indicate possession, showing that the home belongs to your grandparents. It comes after the "s" to show plural possession.
No. Grandparents is the plural form of the word, meaning it is a day to celebrate for more than one grandparent. Grandparent's is the possessive form of the word, meaning the day would belong to a single grandparent.
Grandparent's house
My grandparents' house was burglarized.I inherited my grandparents' 1946 car.Children need their grandparents' attention.A child's grandparents' wisdom and guidance are often useful.
It is definitley grandparents' day!
Yes, the possessive form of grandparents would be "grandparents' " with an apostrophe after the "s" to show ownership or relationship.
Yes. Day is capitalized in Mother's Day and Mother's has an apostrophe before the "s."
grandparents day
Grandparents did :)
The word day is a common singular noun. It requires no apostrophe.I started my day with a shower.If the word day has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.The day's work had just begun.Note: Plural possessive is days' with apostrophe s.
The proper usage is "Lee's" as it indicates possession or belonging to Lee. So, the correct phrase would be "Lee's that" to show that something belongs to Lee.
Parents (no apostrophe) is plural.Parent's (apostrophe s) is singular possessive.Parents' (s apostrophe) is plural possessive.