To show possession or omitted letters.
Horses is a plural word. Horse's is a possessive.
I'll is a contraction of "I" and "will", the apostrophe shows that one or more letters have been omitted. Ill is how one might feel when stricken with the stomach bug.
you dont use an apostrophe in will not
No
Use an apostrophe s to indicate possession.Example:Gibson's guitar strings broke last night.
Use the apostrophe right after the letter s: fighters'
No you don't.
you dont use an apostrophe in will not
you do not use an apostrophe in cultures.
No, the word "that" does not require an apostrophe to show possession. The possessive form of "that" is simply "that's."
An 's preceded by an apostrophe ('s) indicates possession or contraction (e.g., John's book, it's raining). An s followed by an apostrophe (s') is used for plural possessives where the noun is already plural (e.g., the girls' toys).
To show possession after the letter z, add an apostrophe and the letter s (z's). For pluralizing a word that ends in z, add an apostrophe before the s without another s (z').
An apostrophe is used in contraction. Example: you will: you'll
There is not apostrophe in June. But, there would be apostrophe in the following example: June's car was totaled in the accident.
If you are indicating possession (Achilles' heal) use an apostrophe at the end of the word. If you are simply stating his name, there is no apostrophe.
it's (as in it is)
aren't
No
When it is a possessive, use apostrophe. The waitress's coat was stolen. The waitresses' paychecks were cut.