Yes and a capital M.
No, Morrisons should not have an apostrophe in its name. It is a plural possessive noun.
Yes, the sentence should have an apostrophe to denote possession. It should be written as: "Linda and her vice presidents' are going to Brazil."
It should say "Merry Christmas from the Herberts." The apostrophe should not be used to indicate pluralization.
No, the word "that" does not require an apostrophe to show possession. The possessive form of "that" is simply "that's."
No, the first letter of a sentence should not be capitalized if an apostrophe precedes it. The apostrophe indicates a contraction or possession and does not affect the capitalization rules for sentences.
No, "candidates" does not require an apostrophe before the "s" because it is a plural noun, not possessive.
it's is a abbreviation of it is so it should have an apostrophe
no There should never be an apostrophe in "never".
It should not have an apostrophe.
No. Harringtons doesn't need an apostrophe.
Yes, the sentence should have an apostrophe to denote possession. It should be written as: "Linda and her vice presidents' are going to Brazil."
Should not = shouldn't
No, the word "that" does not require an apostrophe to show possession. The possessive form of "that" is simply "that's."
'More reasons to shop at Morrisons'
No there shouldn't be an apostrophe.
No, the correct spelling is Pele without an apostrophe. The use of the accent mark over the 'e' in Pele is to ensure the correct pronunciation of the name.
'Life's gift' should indeed have an apostrophe, as the gift is belonging to life (possessive pronoun), as it were.
Morrisons are owned by Tesco so no