The word fathers is the plural form of the noun father without an apostrophe.
When an apostrophe is added, the noun is the possessive form:
This is the easiest question. A four letter word starting with a w containing an apostrophe is won't. WON'T is the answer
y'all
Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.Apostrophe.
What'd short for what had I said.
An apostrophe is not a letter. It falls into the punctuation category.
'twas (contraction of it was) eg, 'Twas the night before Christmas, ...
An apostrophe would count as a character, but not a letter.
The apostrophe represents the missing letter or letters.
If you put the apostrophe after the letter 's' (womens') you will be adding the letter 's' to the word women (which is already the plural of the word woman) and mispelling it. The correct way is: women's.
If the last name is plural or singular, ends in s or any other letter, it will always end in apostrophe s if it is signifying possession. Example: The Jones's house The Johnson's place
Use the apostrophe right after the letter s: fighters'
Can't