Apostrophe is used in possessions and relationship:
1. Mary's pen,Drivers' instruction book,father's decision.
Apostrophe is used for contractions/omission.
1. It's, I'm ,you're., o'er, o'clock, ma,am, '20s .
Apostrophe is used in certain plural forms.
1. p's and q's,if's and but's,three's and four's
Apostrophe is used to indicate descendants .
1. O'Cooner
An apostrophe is not required.
You wouldn't need to add an apostrophe because the plural of wolf is wolves
If it is required, the apostrophe would come after the Z but before the S. "This is Mr. Buzz's stinger!"
To show something is possessed by one owner, add an apostrophe and the letter 's' to the owner. e.g. the cat's milk. (the milk belongs to the cat) To show possession of plural owners you usually only need to add an apostrophe as most plurals already end in 's'. If the plural doesn't end in 's' then add the apostrophe followed by the 's'.
apostrophe plays an important role in English.In french apostrophe is considered undivided part of language.Apostrophe is used to demonstrate Measure in foot, Ex: 5' means 5 feet.
Yes you do add an apostrophe.
An apostrophe is not required.
For singular nouns, you add an apostrophe and then another 's (e.g., "Jess's book"). For plural nouns that already end in 's', you just add an apostrophe (e.g., "the teachers' lounge").
If the plural noun has possession, indicate it by using an apostrophe after the S.
Add an apostrophe
Yes, you would add an apostrophe before the "s" to show possession. For example, "Smith's car" indicates that the car belongs to Smith.
You wouldn't need to add an apostrophe because the plural of wolf is wolves
When indicating possession with an apostrophe s, you add it to a singular noun (e.g., the cat's whiskers). For plural nouns ending in s, you generally add just an apostrophe (e.g., the cats' toys). For plural nouns not ending in s, you add apostrophe s (e.g., the children's laughter).
When deciding where the apostrophe goes to show possession, follow these steps: Add the apostrophe + s ('s) after the singular noun to show possession (e.g., the dog's tail). Add the apostrophe after the plural noun ending in s to show possession (e.g., the girls' shoes). Add the apostrophe + s ('s) after the plural noun not ending in s to show possession (e.g., the children's toys).
It's couldn't if you add the apostrophe.
Cowboys'. It is perfectly regular: add an 's', then add an apostrophe.
Yes. McCain has ownership over his place of employment. An apostrophe is required.