Apostrophe is never used on a simple plural that doesn't have any possessive.
The bikers went down the hill.
The students hurried to class.
They are never used for a plural noun. (Except by grocers who cannot spell!)
Apostrophes and quotation marks can be used interchangeably.
The brand name of the corn chip snacks is Doritos.(Apostrophes are almost never used to form plural nouns.)
Apostrophes are used to indicate possession: E.g. 'The dog's bone' = 'the bone which belongs to the dog'(except in his, hers, ours, yours (but including one's))Apostrophes are also used to show a contraction:E.g. 'I will not' = 'I won't''You have not' = 'you haven't''They would have' = 'they would've'(careful now it's = 'it is' or 'it has' whereas its= 'belonging to it' because 'its' is like 'his')Apostrophes are never used to make pluralssingular: Flowerplural: flowers (more than one flower)possessive: flower's (belonging to a flower)plural possessive: flowers' (belonging to multiple flowers)
The apostrophe is a punctuation mark used in grammar. An apostrophe may indicated possession. For instance, if a cat has toys that are dirty, a person would say, "The cat's toys are dirty." Apostrophes are never used to indicate a plural form. For instance, the phrase "There are flowers in the garden" would never be "There are flower's in the garden". Apostrophes are also used in conjunctions. For example, the two words "does not" becomes "doesn't". The words "you are" becomes "you're".
No they both have different uses.
Apostrophes and quotation marks can be used interchangeably.
An apostrophe is never used before a full stop. Apostrophes are used to indicate possession ('s) or to show omitted letters in contractions (e.g. can't for cannot).
The apostrophes when used in the Latin language serve many purposes. These apostrophes are punctuation marks that sometimes serve as diacritic marks that show possession.
The brand name of the corn chip snacks is Doritos.(Apostrophes are almost never used to form plural nouns.)
The brand name of the corn chip snacks is Doritos.(Apostrophes are almost never used to form plural nouns.)
This is incorrect. Apostrophes are not used to make plural words singular. Apostrophes are used to show possession or to indicate missing letters in contractions. Plural words are formed by adding "s" or "es" depending on the word.
Apostrophes are used to indicate possession: E.g. 'The dog's bone' = 'the bone which belongs to the dog'(except in his, hers, ours, yours (but including one's))Apostrophes are also used to show a contraction:E.g. 'I will not' = 'I won't''You have not' = 'you haven't''They would have' = 'they would've'(careful now it's = 'it is' or 'it has' whereas its= 'belonging to it' because 'its' is like 'his')Apostrophes are never used to make pluralssingular: Flowerplural: flowers (more than one flower)possessive: flower's (belonging to a flower)plural possessive: flowers' (belonging to multiple flowers)
It would be nurses should. Apostrophes are almost never used to form plurals.
The apostrophe is a punctuation mark used in grammar. An apostrophe may indicated possession. For instance, if a cat has toys that are dirty, a person would say, "The cat's toys are dirty." Apostrophes are never used to indicate a plural form. For instance, the phrase "There are flowers in the garden" would never be "There are flower's in the garden". Apostrophes are also used in conjunctions. For example, the two words "does not" becomes "doesn't". The words "you are" becomes "you're".
No, apostrophes and hyphens serve specific functions in writing. Apostrophes are used to indicate possession or contraction, while hyphens are used to join words or to clarify the meaning of a word or phrase. Both punctuation marks are important for clarity and proper grammar.
Never. As apostrophes represent ownership or a contraction I do not believe sees has an apostrophe.
No, because it is an apostrophe, not a comma, and there are never spaces after apostrophes.