daughter's wedding
Only if you're using it to display possessiveness. If it's the simple plural then there is no apostrophe.The plural possessive would be daughters'.
A noun that shows ownership using an apostrophe is a possessive noun.
A possessive apostrophe means just that. It means that the apostrophe is indicating that that noun has ownership or possession, purpose or origin of the noun that comes after it.Examples:This is John's house.John owns the house, therefore, it is John's house.We went to the children's playground.The playground intended for children.The term 'possessive apostrophe' is used to distinguish the apostrophe from a contraction using an apostrophe.
The apostrophe is used for possessive nouns and for contractions. In some rare cases, such as letters and numbers, an apostrophe is used with S to create a plural noun.
There are three types of apostrophe. The possessive apostrophe, to show that a letter is missing and to highlight a word or phrase, eg 'hasn't', doesn't', 'can't'. The possessive apostrophe would be used in a sentence such as 'The student's work was of a high standard' meaning the work of the student. However if you are using the word students in the plural form, it would be written 'students' work'.
Only if you're using it to display possessiveness. If it's the simple plural then there is no apostrophe.The plural possessive would be daughters'.
Firm's. Any singular possessive where the word does not end in 's' is apostrophe 's' ('s).
No, "candidates" does not require an apostrophe before the "s" because it is a plural noun, not possessive.
"Companies" is the plural "company" and doesn't require an apostrophe unless you are using a plural possessive. With the plural possessive, the apostrophe should appear at the end of the word after the 's'.
A noun that shows ownership using an apostrophe is a possessive noun.
No, unless your name has an apostrophe in it or you are using it in the possessive.
The plural noun soldiers adds only the apostrophe after the -s for the possessive form: soldiers'
A possessive apostrophe means just that. It means that the apostrophe is indicating that that noun has ownership or possession, purpose or origin of the noun that comes after it.Examples:This is John's house.John owns the house, therefore, it is John's house.We went to the children's playground.The playground intended for children.The term 'possessive apostrophe' is used to distinguish the apostrophe from a contraction using an apostrophe.
The possessive form for "home of an animal" is the "animal's home".
visitors---If you are using visitors as a plural of visitor, then you don't need an apostrophe.Visitor's (note apostrophe s) is a singular possessive. That is my visitor's luggage.Visitors' (note s apostrophe) is a plural possessive. This is the visitors' lounge.
No, possessive pronouns do not use an apostrophe to indicate possession.The possessive pronouns are words that take the place of a possessive noun.The pronouns that show possession are:possessive pronouns: mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs.possessive adjectives: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.Nouns indicate possession using an apostrophe. Examples:That is Nancy's house. (possessive noun)That house is hers. (possessive pronoun)That is her house. (possessive adjective)
The apostrophe is used for possessive nouns and for contractions. In some rare cases, such as letters and numbers, an apostrophe is used with S to create a plural noun.