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).
Students'
"Students' is used with an apostrophe at the end when it denotes possession by multiple students. For example, 'The students' desks were arranged in rows'."
No, you do not need to put an apostrophe in the word "hundreds" unless you are indicating a contraction or possession.
That depends on how you're trying to use the word. See the sentences below for examples: 1) I have 30 students in my class. 2) I have 30 students' books in my class. 3) I have this student's homework slip. Sentence one has an S because it is indicating plurality. Sentence two has an apostrophe after the S because it is indicating plurality and possession. Sentence three has an apostrophe S because it is indicating singular possession.
Yes, you would put an apostrophe after the z when making it possessive. For example, "The dog's leash" would be correct.
The apostrophe in "children" would be placed before the "s" to show possession: children's.
Yes, the phrase should be "most students' experiences" to show possession by plural students.
The correct way to write the sentence is: "The students' books are on his desk." The apostrophe is placed after the "s" in "students" to show that the books belong to the students.
Neither one. The apostrophe indicates possession or ownership. It would be plain students, with no apostrophe.
after the t (it's) You put an apostrophe on 'its' if it's a contraction of "it is." Otherwise, 'its' has no apostrophe because that's its nature.
Put the apostrophe in mices right after s.: mices'
No apostrophe is to be putted in this sentence.
"Students' is used with an apostrophe at the end when it denotes possession by multiple students. For example, 'The students' desks were arranged in rows'."
Personally, no. But it's not incorrect to put the apostrophe.
"Volkswagen" doesn't require an apostrophe.
The apostrophe in "cyclist" would be placed before the last letter when indicating possession: cyclist's.
An apostrophe indicates possession or attribute (something about a noun).The singular is student's -- belonging to a student (e.g. the student's locker).The plural is students' -- belonging to more than one (e.g. the students' lockers).
no matter what you usually have to put a period after an apostrophe because it's the end of a sentence.