A possessive apostrophe is an apostrophe used at the end of a noun, forming a possessive noun.
A possessive noun is a noun indicating ownership or possession.
Possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe -s to the end of the word, or just an apostrophe to plural nouns that already end with -s. Examples:
The possessive is also used as shorthand for something that does not literally belong to that person or thing, it's used in place of 'of' or 'for'. Examples:
won't
Additional answer
It's not true to say that won't is in an apostrophe. Apostrophe is the little comma that goes into words where one or more letters have been omitted and won't is the contracted form of will not.
^I think they know what an apostrophe is! They were asking what 'will not' was when it was shortened with an apostrophe.
An old meaning of "apostrophe" is a speech addressed to someone, who has perhaps just died. The Roman poet Ovid gave an apostrophe which was fairly plain and blunt.
And an old meaning of "vulgar" meant "common", to do with the common people. So Ovid's plain blunt speech has been called his "vulgar apostrophe".
An apostrophe that expresses possession, e.g.mom's, bird's, city's An apostrophe that expresses possession, e.g.mom's, bird's, city's
A possessive apostrophe is one that shows a noun is possessing something such as Billy's car, the cat's whisker's, the book's cover, etc.
A possessive noun always has an apostrophe.
When there is a plural possesive. Example: All the farmers' feilds were attacked by crows.
For plural nouns that end in -s add an apostrophe. - parents' The parents' cars were in the driveway.
The possessive form of class is class'. You can also add an apostrophe plus an "s" to make the word class possessive.
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.
Yes, the wage belongs to the year (as such) and therefore a possesive apostrophe is needed.
A possessive noun always has an apostrophe.
The apostrophe goes before the "s" in "offenders," making it "offenders'." This indicates that something belongs to the offenders.
When there is a plural possesive. Example: All the farmers' feilds were attacked by crows.
It is family's house. The apostrophe denotes a possesive and the house is possesed by a family, not by a familys.
For plural nouns that end in -s add an apostrophe. - parents' The parents' cars were in the driveway.
The possessive form of class is class'. You can also add an apostrophe plus an "s" to make the word class possessive.
The plural of bus is buses, and the possessive of all English plural nouns ending in -s is formed by adding an apostrophe: buses'
A plural possessive noun is a noun that refers to more than one person, place, or thing and shows ownership or relationship with another noun. It is formed by adding an apostrophe and the letter "s" after the plural noun (e.g., "teachers' lounge").
It depends on the context of the sentence. If the sentence showed possesive form/year+is of the word year, for example, "This year's 2011." If it is plural form of year, example "He has been my friend for years." then there is no apostrophe.
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.
his