No apostrophe needed in the sentence "The turkey has two ears."
The turkey has two ears.
The apostrophe in "two's" indicates possession or contraction. It is used to show that something belongs to or is associated with "two" (e.g., "two's company," "two's a crowd").
If you are referring to possession, use the apostrophe: "The TV's screen was cracked." If you are referring to multiple TVs, use the plural form without an apostrophe: "There were two TVs in the living room."
The correct possessive form of "two years" is "two years'."
We use an apostrophe to show possession (such as "John's car") and to indicate contractions (such as "can't" instead of "cannot").
No, you do not need to use an apostrophe in the sentence "I have two cousins." Apostrophes are typically used to show possession or to indicate missing letters in contractions.
A contraction is made of two words with an apostrophe. Note the apostrophe replaces a letter.
The apostrophe in "two's" indicates possession or contraction. It is used to show that something belongs to or is associated with "two" (e.g., "two's company," "two's a crowd").
The apostrophe has two functions: to indicate missing letters due to contraction or abbreviation, and to indicate the possessive. I can't tell you which of the two is the apostrophe's main function. (The previous sentence uses both: "can't" is a contraction and "apostrophe's" is a possessive)
It depends. If you are talking about "the year's best game," there's an apostrophe. If you're talking about "two or more years," there is no apostrophe.
We have two ears and one mouth.
Jackrabbist have two ears.
The two primary reasons to use an apostrophe are within:contractionspossessivesI can't believe John's collection was stolen.
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.
there is nooo such thing
"Feet" has no apostrophes.
the apostrophe of you had is 'you'd' the reason however that you use that's, is because it is two words put together, and in this case it's 'that is.'
The apostrophe in a contraction holds the place of one or more letters omitted from the conjoining of two words.