Yes, the plural form is employees; the plural possessive form is employees', for example the employees' entrance.
Yes, if it will show ownership. It should be proteges'.
A noun that shows ownership using an apostrophe is a possessive noun.
Some nouns that show ownership using an apostrophe are "couch's, house's, equation's", etc.
The apostrophe in the word Billy's means Billy's ownership of something.
The apostrophe denotes ownership Pandora is a proper name and in this context she owns the box.
Yes, if it will show ownership. It should be proteges'.
A noun that shows ownership using an apostrophe is a possessive noun.
Some nouns that show ownership using an apostrophe are "couch's, house's, equation's", etc.
No, the correct way to form the possessive form of "Marcus" is to add an apostrophe followed by another "s" (Marcus's). This is the standard rule for creating possessives of singular nouns ending in "s."
Yes. Children's is used to show ownership. Example: children's school
Andok's has an apostrophe because it shows ownership. Example: Andok's chicken
There should be an apostrophe s ('s) after Jullian, but there is no apostrophe s ('s) at the end of John:John and Jullian's house seems grey.
people's would should a groups ownership peoples' would show a group of individuals ownership i hope that helps. it makes sense in my mind, but not sure how it will sound to you!
Never. As apostrophes represent ownership or a contraction I do not believe sees has an apostrophe.
The apostrophe in the word Billy's means Billy's ownership of something.
No, the word "monet" does not have an apostrophe. It is spelled as "Monet."
No, the word is spelled "employees" that's correct.