The princess's car
The singular is "princess" and the plural is "princesses." The possessives are princess's and princesses' (apostrophe only for most plurals).
The possessive form can be princess's or princess' -- although some styles require the apostrophe S instead of just the apostrophe in formal writing, the meaning is usually obvious, and does have the benefit of not being confused with a colloquial contraction (e.g. He knows where the princess's been).
An apostrophe is not required.
An apostrophe signifies possession - the thing belongs to the person pr people named So If my mother has a car then - my mother's car = my mom's car If my mother is a member of a committee made up of other mothers, then the committee she is on might be "The Moms' Committee" For one mother - the apostrophe goes before the s, for a group of mothers the apostrophe goes after the s.
The possessive form of words that already end in s is subject to some differences of opinion, but personally I recommend that you just add an apostrophe, rather than an apostrophe and another s. Trying to pronounce two s sounds in sequence doesn't work very well, and you wind up sounding as if you are trying to imitate a snake. However, the plural form of princess is still princesses. With that added e, it can be pronounced.
The singular is "princess" and the plural is "princesses." The possessives are princess's and princesses' (apostrophe only for most plurals).
There is not apostrophe in June. But, there would be apostrophe in the following example: June's car was totaled in the accident.
The possessive form can be princess's or princess' -- although some styles require the apostrophe S instead of just the apostrophe in formal writing, the meaning is usually obvious, and does have the benefit of not being confused with a colloquial contraction (e.g. He knows where the princess's been).
An apostrophe is not required.
Princess - car - was created in 1975.
The apostrophe goes before the "o" in "Archaeologist" to indicate the missing letters in the word "Archaeology." The correct spelling is "Archaeologist."
There is no apostrophe in "Sports Field"
My father's car because the apostrophe shows ownership
There are two accepted forms for possessive singular nouns ending in s:Add an apostrophe (') after the existing s at the end of the word: princess'Add an apostrophe s ('s) after the existing s at the end of the word: princess'sExamples:The princess' nanny took her to the museum.The princess's nanny took her to the museum.
It was Princess Diana who died in a car crash in Paris.
Mrs Debase. (no apostrophe) Mrs Debase's handbag. (Possessive apostrophe)
An apostrophe can be used to indicate:1. contractionsExamples:do not: don'tit is: it's2. possessionsAnn's fashionKev's car