To indicate possession, use an apostrophe S after a word.
An apostrophe followed by an "s" is used to indicate possession or ownership of something. For example, "Mary's book" indicates that the book belongs to Mary. It is also used to create contractions, such as "can't" for "cannot."
If you mean (s') then when you are talking about possession and the word ends in a s (Francis' bike) or if you mean ('s) than you are just talking about possession (Nathan's bed)
The apostrophe in the word "Texas" is placed before the "s" to indicate possession (e.g. Texas's economy).
Apostrophes are used to show possession or ownership, indicating that something belongs to someone (e.g., the dog's bone). Apostrophes are also used in contractions to represent missing letters, such as in "can't" (can + not) or "it's" (it + is).
A possessive noun ending with "s" adds an apostrophe after the "s," like in "James' car." For possessive nouns ending with "sh," you would also add an apostrophe after the "sh," like in "Marsh's book."
To form the possessive of a singular noun, add 's (apostrophe + s) at the end of the word. For plural nouns that do not end with an s, also add 's. For plural nouns that end with an s, just add an apostrophe after the s.
The apostrophe in "children" would be placed before the "s" to show possession: children's.
With the word 'men' you would put the apostrophe between 'men' and 's'.
yes
It means there is already an "s" at the end of the word
If it shows possession and ends in the letter s.
The apostrophe in "cyclist" would be placed before the last letter when indicating possession: cyclist's.
Put the apostrophe in mices right after s.: mices'
You'll use an apostrophe s on the word son if you are showing possession or using a contraction. Examples: "That is my son's room." "My son's out at the moment" -- This is a contraction of "son" and "is"
Apostrophes are used to show possession or ownership, indicating that something belongs to someone (e.g., the dog's bone). Apostrophes are also used in contractions to represent missing letters, such as in "can't" (can + not) or "it's" (it + is).
Personally, no. But it's not incorrect to put the apostrophe.
The correct placement of the apostrophe in "Guss' diary" signifies that the diary belongs to Guss. Placing the apostrophe before the "s" indicates possession by a singular noun ending in "s."
If the word ends in apostrophe s or ends in s apostrophe, then there is NO space before or after the apostrophe, but always a space before the next word.
If the word ends in s, then you can put the apostrophe after; for example, girl's means belonging to the girl, but girls' means belonging to the girls.