The apostrophe goes between the "l" and the "s" in "girls. It goes and followed: Girl's cloakroom. The apostrophe is used to show ownership in this sentence. In this case the cloakroom belongs to the girls, this is why you must have the apostophe to show the ownership.
If the cloakroom belongs to one girl:Close the door of the girl's cloakroom quietly.If the cloakroom belongs to more than one girl (plural possessive):Close the door of the girls' cloakroom quietly.
An apostrophe is not required.
This will depend upon how many girls have the same uncle. If you are referring to one girl, the apostrophe would be between the l and the s: the girl's uncle. If you are referring to more than one girl, the apostrophe would be after the s: the girls' uncle. Both versions indicate possession - the uncle of the girl or the uncle of the girls.
You probably need a possessive: girls' soccer team (the team that belongs to the girls, the team they are part of). But don't be shocked if you see it without the apostrophe-- sometimes people just write it the way you did, even though it should have the apostrophe.
The apostrophe in a contraction holds the place of a letter or group of letters. Example: Don't = Do not (the apostrophe holds the place of the 'o') They've = They have (the apostrophe holds the place of the 'ha')
The apostrophe goes between the "l" and the "s" in "girls. It goes and followed: Girl's cloakroom. The apostrophe is used to show ownership in this sentence. In this case the cloakroom belongs to the girls, this is why you must have the apostophe to show the ownership.
If the cloakroom belongs to one girl:Close the door of the girl's cloakroom quietly.If the cloakroom belongs to more than one girl (plural possessive):Close the door of the girls' cloakroom quietly.
The correct sentence with the apostrophe placed is: "The two girls' bicycles were stolen." The apostrophe goes after the word "girls" to indicate possession by the girls.
I would say the apostrophe goes after the s in girls (Girls' Basketball Team). It is talking about a team that belongs to more than one girl.
Do you mean cloakroom? If so, a cloakroom is a place, in a building, where belongings and coats are temporarilyheld.
An apostrophe is not required.
The girl's dress.
Only if the title is a proper name, that is, if Carolina Girl is the name of a group. Then you must use the apostrophe to show possession. If the name of the group is Carolina Girls, then no apostrophe is necessary.
This will depend upon how many girls have the same uncle. If you are referring to one girl, the apostrophe would be between the l and the s: the girl's uncle. If you are referring to more than one girl, the apostrophe would be after the s: the girls' uncle. Both versions indicate possession - the uncle of the girl or the uncle of the girls.
There are a number of places where one can purchase a cloakroom suite. For instance, Better Bathrooms, Bathshop 321, and Bathroom Heaven all carry cloakroom suites at affordable prices.
There is no apostrophe in "Sports Field"
cloakroom