If you are talking about possession.
e.g the boy's book.
If you are simply referring to the plural of boy then there is no apostrophe.
e.g. the boys played together after school.
The term can refer to a school that one boy attends or that many boys attend.
For a school that one boy attends, the correct form is "boy's school"
For a school that many boys attend, the correct form is "boys' school"
The word boys is a common plural noun. It requires no apostrophe.
The boys were laughing.
If the word boys has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.
The boy's laughter could be heard in the hallway.
The guide filled the boys' canteens.
The possessive form for the plural noun boys is boys'.
Example: The boys' teams will be using the tennis court today.
If it is one boy it would be boy's. If it is boys as a plural, e.g., two boys, it would be boys'.
Yes, with the placement depending on how many boys there are.
For one boy, it's "The boy's actions"
For more than one boy, it's "The boys' actions"
Boys'
The apostrophe in "catholic boys' school" indicates possession, showing that the school belongs to the boys of the Catholic faith.
There isn't one - or at least it's not normally used. If you HAD to insert one - it would be after boys... naughty boys' school.
The correct placement of the apostrophe in "boy's" depends on whether you are referring to a singular boy (boy's) or multiple boys (boys'). In the singular possessive form, the apostrophe comes before the 's' (boy's), while in the plural possessive form, the apostrophe comes after the 's' (boys').
Yes, the bathroom is for all boys, so the noun is the plural form. The bathroom for the boys is the boys' bathroom.
The correct placement for the apostrophe for "the boys" would be "the boys'."
It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.It is a school for boys, so there are no girls.
The sentence should say "Sean is the tallest of the two boys," not "tallest of the two boys." The word "the" should come before "tallest" for correct grammar.
An 's preceded by an apostrophe ('s) indicates possession or contraction (e.g., John's book, it's raining). An s followed by an apostrophe (s') is used for plural possessives where the noun is already plural (e.g., the girls' toys).
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.
Those boys' bicycles were stolen outside the store.
The apostrophe 's is used to indicate possession (belonging to someone or something) or to contract words (such as "it is" becomes "it's"). For example: "Sarah's car" (possession) or "It's raining" (contraction of "it is").
Typically, to form the possessive form of a noun, we add an apostrophe and an "s" at the end of the noun. For example, "dog's bone" or "cat's tail." However, if the noun is irregular, already ends in "s," or is a plural noun, we only add an apostrophe at the end. For instance, "James' car," "girls' school," or "dogs' toys."