The correct usage would be for possessive nouns, such as "Sara's book" or "the dog's tail."
A possessive pronoun uses an apostrophe to show possession, such as "one's" or "someone's."
No, the word "your" does not require an apostrophe. "Your" is a possessive pronoun, while "you're" is a contraction for "you are" that uses an apostrophe.
Without the sentences provided, I can't determine which sentence uses commas correctly.
None of the pronouns use an apostrophe for the possessive form. The possessive forms are:possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.possessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, their, its.
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").
There are 8 different moon phases.
A possessive pronoun uses an apostrophe to show possession, such as "one's" or "someone's."
apostrophe
An apostrophe with omission describes contractions and special uses like o'er and o'clock.Some contractions are:He'llWe'reShe'd
Some nouns that show ownership using an apostrophe are "couch's, house's, equation's", etc.
Valentine's Day uses an apostrophe. However, most people just use the plural form valentines for cards.
No, the word "your" does not require an apostrophe. "Your" is a possessive pronoun, while "you're" is a contraction for "you are" that uses an apostrophe.
apostrophe
A plural possessive noun is a noun that has an apostrophe after the word. This is mainly uses when the word ens in the letter S or when theres two or more things being stated.
The apostrophe has two functions: to indicate missing letters due to contraction or abbreviation, and to indicate the possessive. I can't tell you which of the two is the apostrophe's main function. (The previous sentence uses both: "can't" is a contraction and "apostrophe's" is a possessive)
A contraction uses an apostrophe.They will come soon. They'll come soon.
Without the sentences provided, I can't determine which sentence uses commas correctly.