Want this question answered?
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 of "kid" is "kid's," so the apostrophe goes before the s. For example, "the kid's toy."
apostrophe
The term it's is a contraction of the words it is with an apostrophe, and is often confused with its, which means the possession of a thing, but without an apostrophe.
This term means 'search machine'. This is a type of website that provides a service for its clients the ability to look through the world wide web using keywords queries.
The word o'clock is an instance when the apostrophe replaces full words as a contraction.The term o'clock is a contraction for "of the clock".
No, there is no apostrophe after the 's' in "Grandparents Day." The term is already possessive with the 's' indicating that the day is dedicated to all grandparents.
It is somhow related to Darling or Darlene and is a term of endearment, a personalization or personification of Love. Probably originally D"arlene, which is in apostrophe as Lamour originally was.
Empirical probability.
clients.
clients.
Yes, "Awards Day" does not have an apostrophe. The term is a straightforward plural noun, so no possessive form is needed.