The word geese implies many, so you don't need it here. You would say the geeses flight was long. That is a special case where there is a word for a plural already.
No, the correct way to indicate possession for plural nouns like "geese" is "The geese are carrying." There is no need for an apostrophe before the "s" in this case.
The word "geese's" is the possessive form of "geese." An example sentence using "geese's" would be: The geese's migration route takes them south for the winter.
apostrophe, such as in "could've" for "could have" or "don't" for "do not".
"I'd" is the contraction for "I would" using an apostrophe.
Neither. The apostrophe is not used with a plural. This is a common mistake.It is not even correct to make the plural numbers using an apostrophe. For example, it is not correct to write the 1980's, but the correct form is the 1980s.
No, "candidates" does not require an apostrophe before the "s" because it is a plural noun, not possessive.
The word "geese's" is the possessive form of "geese." An example sentence using "geese's" would be: The geese's migration route takes them south for the winter.
Yes, the apostrophe is in the correct place. "Their" is possessive, indicating that the book belongs to them, and the apostrophe comes before the s to show possession. So, "their book's" is correct.
It all depends on how you are using the word city, but an apostrophe can be used appropriately like this: City's Cities'
It's is the contraction for it is....so if you are using the contraction, use the apostrophe. If you are not, then do NOT use it.
No, using the apostrophe makes W-4 into the singular possessive form. The correct plural is W-4s.
apostrophe, such as in "could've" for "could have" or "don't" for "do not".
"I'd" is the contraction for "I would" using an apostrophe.
When you select it, it removes every apostrophe in the story.
Neither. The apostrophe is not used with a plural. This is a common mistake.It is not even correct to make the plural numbers using an apostrophe. For example, it is not correct to write the 1980's, but the correct form is the 1980s.
If the plural noun has possession, indicate it by using an apostrophe after the S.
A contraction is made of two words with an apostrophe. Note the apostrophe replaces a letter.
Client's is the correct spelling for the singular form, e.g. "That is my client's briefcase." Clients' is the correct punctuation for the plural form, e.g. "Those are my clients' briefcases."