An apostrophe with omission describes contractions and special uses like o'er and o'clock.
Some contractions are:
He'll
We're
She'd
The phrase apostrophe for omission sounds like a teacher's comment when you misused an apostrophe. If so, it just means remove the apostrophe.Wrong: The boy's bikes were red.Right: The boys' bikes were red.
The word o'er is an apostrophe of omission. It left out the v in over.
none
apostrophe
The apostrophe of omission is used to substitute for letters in a contraction, or for words in special situations, like o'clock.The apostrophe of possession is used to show a noun's possessions or belongings.The curtains' hems were frayed.Or for a proper noun's possessions or belongings.John's house was painted light green with red shutters.
The phrase apostrophe for omission sounds like a teacher's comment when you misused an apostrophe. If so, it just means remove the apostrophe.Wrong: The boy's bikes were red.Right: The boys' bikes were red.
The word o'er is an apostrophe of omission. It left out the v in over.
Possession, contraction, omission.
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An apostrophe is used to indicate the omission of letter sounds in dialectal speech. For example, "can't" instead of "cannot" or "I'm" instead of "I am".
apostrophe
apostrophe, such as in "could've" for "could have" or "don't" for "do not".
The apostrophe of omission is used to substitute for letters in a contraction, or for words in special situations, like o'clock.The apostrophe of possession is used to show a noun's possessions or belongings.The curtains' hems were frayed.Or for a proper noun's possessions or belongings.John's house was painted light green with red shutters.
Use an apostrophe to indicate the following: Possession (cat's tail) Contraction (can't do it) Omission (O'Riley, O'Hara)
In standard usage, there should be no space after an apostrophe that shows omission (''). The apostrophe serves as a punctuation mark and should directly connect to the next character without a space in between.
Use an apostrophe to indicate the following: Possession - This is the boy's ball Contraction - I can't believe that! Omission - His name is O'Hara
The apostrophe in O'Neal and O'Sullivan is actually a mark of elision -- an omission of one or more sounds in a word or phrase.