Yes, as in "The children's hour"
You put the apostrophe in children's between the n and the s. Children is plural for child. Since children is plural adding the apostrophe s makes it possessive.
An apostrophe followed by an "s" is used to indicate possession or ownership of something. For example, "Mary's book" indicates that the book belongs to Mary. It is also used to create contractions, such as "can't" for "cannot."
According to the Oxford English Dictionary the following rules apply when dealing with possessives:To form a possessive from a singular noun, add an apostrophe followed by s: 'the girl's book'.Add an apostrophe to plurals ending in s, e. g. 'the girls' books'.If a plural noun does not end in s, add an apostrophe followed by s: 'the children's toys'.Also add an apostrophe to a name ending in -es that is pronounced like the word is: 'Moses'mother'.
Is the apostrophe for fishermans' in the right place? If you are talking about a fisherman and his boat, it would be "the fisherman's boat is ..."
An apostrophe is placed before the "s" to indicate possession for singular nouns (e.g., "the dog's collar"). For plural nouns that already end in "s," the apostrophe is added after the "s" (e.g., "the dogs' park"). For plural nouns that do not end in "s," the apostrophe precedes the "s" (e.g., "the children's toys").
The apostrophe in "rhinoceros" to show possession should go after the "s", making it "rhinoceros'".
To show something is possessed by one owner, add an apostrophe and the letter 's' to the owner. e.g. the cat's milk. (the milk belongs to the cat) To show possession of plural owners you usually only need to add an apostrophe as most plurals already end in 's'. If the plural doesn't end in 's' then add the apostrophe followed by the 's'.
If you are referring to the possession of the plural requests.
When a plural noun ends with an s, the apostrophe (') is placed after the s at the end of the word to indicate possession; for example, the books' covers, the cars' owners, the tenants' rights, etc.When a plural noun does not end with an s, an apostrophe s is added to the end of the word to indicate possession; for example, the children's playground, men's suits, her teeth's whiteness, etc.
An apostrophe is used outside the s to indicate possession for singular nouns (e.g., the boy's hat) and plural nouns not ending in s (e.g., the children's toys).
There is no apostrophe in the name Hernandez. But if you're talking about an accent mark, it's on the a: Hernández.
Same as any other use. Use an apostrophe S to indicate possession.