The apostrophe in "years" goes before the "s" to show possession, like this: "years'."
It should be: Linda's Early Years
An apostrophe is not required.
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.
If you are taking about the years from 1800 to 1899, then it is a plural, so it is the 1800s. If you are talking about something belonging to the year 1800, then it is a possessive and so it uses an apostrophe. For example, you could have something like: 1800's summer was very good. It is very common to see people use the apostrophe in the wrong way when talking about years that way.
There is no apostrophe in "Sports Field"
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.
This is correct. It is awkward, but that's the way it works. I may say, "Congratulations on 10 years of service." This eliminates the apostrophe problem and sounds more fluid.
Mrs Debase. (no apostrophe) Mrs Debase's handbag. (Possessive apostrophe)
Doesn't
Lost wages doesn't need an apostrophe.
No, the sentence "She has almost 30 years experience" does not require an apostrophe after the s in the word years. The word "years" is used as a plural noun in this context, describing the duration of experience, so no apostrophe is needed.
No. The "years" in that instance is simply the plural of year. The "year" does not poses anything.