apostrophy after the s
If a name ends in (s), you will show possession with an ('s). Examples: James's son Tonks's wand Crookshanks's tail
yes
Yup. If a name ends in "s," you just add an apostrophe s to make it plural. Examples: James's son Tonks's wand Crookshanks's tail
If you are showing possession, then you use an apostrophe and an s at the end of the name...unless the name ends with an s. In that case, you only add the apostrophe. example: Tom's brother is James. James' brother is Tom.
The first one I thought of was 'Caesars'.
apostrophy after the s
If a name ends in (s), you will show possession with an ('s). Examples: James's son Tonks's wand Crookshanks's tail
yes
if the object is plural and the plural ends in s or if it is a name that ends in s and has two or more sylables
Cinders
my nuts
Yup. If a name ends in "s," you just add an apostrophe s to make it plural. Examples: James's son Tonks's wand Crookshanks's tail
Olympus
Stork
Solstice?
If you are showing possession, then you use an apostrophe and an s at the end of the name...unless the name ends with an s. In that case, you only add the apostrophe. example: Tom's brother is James. James' brother is Tom.