The apostrophe for a plural noun ending in -s is placed after the ending -s.
Example: The two years' growth of the sapling is more than a foot.
The correct possessive form of "two years" is "two years'."
When a word ends with an "s" you place the apostrophe after that - years'
The possessive form for "two years" is "two years'" with an apostrophe after the "s."
No, it is not correct to use an apostrophe after the 's' in the word years in this sentence. The correct way to write it would be "She has almost 30 years of experience in teaching languages."
If there is a possession being signified, then yes. Example: Last year's numbers are better than this year's numbers. If there is no possession, then no. Example: These last years have been the best of my life!
Yes, an apostrophe is used in "year's" to show possession or the passage of time. For example, "last year's report" or "one year's worth of experience."
university'sExample sentences:1. "The Goodbody University has seen a steady increase in placement applications over recent years. In the light of this, the University's policy on new admissions has had to be modified so that ...."2. "Many cities boast about their modern centres of excellence, their universities. However, a closer look at each university's actual premises and facilities may present a different picture."
The possessive form for "two years" is "two years'" with an apostrophe after the "s."
There is no contraction in the given sentence.The noun Davies should be possessive but it has no apostrophe to indicate possession.The correct possessive form for the singular noun Davies is:Davies' or Davies's (both are accepted as correct)Examples:Davies' life lasted eighty-two years from 1913 to 1995.Davies's life lasted eighty-two years from 1913 to 1995.
Although we used to use apostrophes to indicate a series of years, the current convention is to drop the apostrophe and write a decade as a simple plural, like 1980s. The argument for changing this practice was that the added apostrophe created an incorrect possessive.
The job belongs to last year as it was, so it is a possessive. So there is an apostrophe needed between year and s, so it does not indicate a plural. The correct form is: Last year's job.
It was John's car. (possessive of proper noun)It's his right to vote every four years. (contraction of It is)The cat licked its sore paw. (possessive)
There is no possessive noun in the sentence:"The need of America for lumber was great 100 years ago."The sentence has to be reworded to use a possessive form noun:"America's need for lumber was great 100 years ago."A possessive noun is indicated by an apostrophe s ('s) at the end of a word that doesn't already end with an s; or just an apostrophe (') at the end of a plural noun that does end with an s.
No, it is not correct to use an apostrophe after the 's' in the word years in this sentence. The correct way to write it would be "She has almost 30 years of experience in teaching languages."
This is correct. It is awkward, but that's the way it works. I may say, "Congratulations on 10 years of service." This eliminates the apostrophe problem and sounds more fluid.
The word "Apostrophe" doesn't have a physical age as it is not a living being. However, the concept of using apostrophes in the English language has been around for centuries, dating back to the 16th century.
If you are talking about the group of years from 1890 to 1890, then it is 1890s, so no apostrophe is needed. If you are talking about something relating to the year 1890, then it is a possessive and it needs the apostrophe: "What was 1890's most significant historic event?"
If there is a possession being signified, then yes. Example: Last year's numbers are better than this year's numbers. If there is no possession, then no. Example: These last years have been the best of my life!
No, "this years" does not have an apostrophe. It should be written as "this year's" if you intend to show possession.