Want this question answered?
The correct form is "The coats belong to the children." There is no need for an apostrophe in this sentence because "children" is a plural noun, not possessive.
The correct sentence should be: "The women's coats are here." In this case, the apostrophe goes before the "s" to show that the coats belong to the women.
The correct way to write the sentence is: "The students' books are on his desk." The apostrophe is placed after the "s" in "students" to show that the books belong to the students.
Yes. Cline's is where the apostrophe needs to be. The records belong to Cline.
The correct placement of the apostrophe in the sentence should be: "The cat's bowls are on the floor." The apostrophe indicates possession by showing that the bowls belong to the cat.
Glasses' rim.
Lewis'
No because the apostrophe doesn't belong. It is plural so no apostrophe is needed
The apostrophe should be placed as follows: "your grandparents' farm." This indicates that the farm belongs to your grandparents.
An apostrophe is used to show possession: the house belongs to the Robinsons; therefore, it is the Robinsons's house. Our house (or ours - no apostrophe) is on Randolph Drive. Randolph is the name of the drive; it doesn't belong to anybody in this sentence. Of course, the sentence should be:"The Robinsons' house is on Spring Street but ours is on Randolph Drive" as "ours" is a possessive but is an exception. Unfortunately the Wiki spell checker doesn't know the correct usage either. Sigh.
It should be: camels' bodies
Yes, the phrase "This Year's Honorees" does need an apostrophe. The apostrophe indicates possession or belonging, showing that the honorees belong to or are associated with "This Year."