The word meaning 'belongs to them' is their.
Example: Jack and Jill have invited us to their party.
The pronoun 'their' is a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to show that noun belongs to 'them'.
Possessive adjectives do not have an apostrophe.
The possessive adjectives are: my, your, his, her, its, our, their.
Possessive words - his, her, our - or possessive forms - John's, doctor's, - are used to show that some thing 'belongs' to someone or something eg John's sister -- the sister 'belongs to John The doctor's car -- the car belongs to the doctor. Our cat -- the cat belongs to us
The ISBN of Your Heart Belongs to Me - novel - is 0553807137.
Belong is a verb.
Anyone who is preparing food "belongs" in the kitchen. Neither sex belongs there permanently.
y'all
The apostrophe in "kids table" is placed after the word "kids", making it "kids' table" to indicate that the table belongs to multiple kids.
The reasoning is this: what is being talked about is something (it's sake) that belongs to your conscience. It is therefore that which belongs to your conscience - possessive - and it becomes conscience's sake.
That depends upon what you are trying to say. The plural of student is students, no apostrophe. If you wish to say that something belongs to a particular student, then it is the student's (book, or whatever). If you wish to say that something belongs to a group of students, then it is the students' (school, or whatever).
The correct placement of the apostrophe is: "Mark was reading his grandfather's journal." This shows that the journal belongs to his grandfather.
I'm not an apostrophe, but an apostrophe is an useful ting in langue arts. and It is used for like Annie's dog, something belongs to her..
Yes, the wage belongs to the year (as such) and therefore a possesive apostrophe is needed.
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."
When it belongs to another person
Yes, when it is New Year's Eve or New Year's Day. They are possessives, as in the day that belongs to a new year. If you are talking about plurals, then there is no apostrophe, like "New years are not like old years".
You only use an apostrophe in it's when it is a contraction of it is. If you are using ITS to describe something belonging to IT, such as "It was wagging its tail," then the tail belongs to it and so its does not have an apostrophe.
No, the word "yours" does not use an apostrophe. It is a possessive pronoun that indicates something belongs to you.
Use an apostrophe if you want to show possession. Example: grandma's garden