Yes, that is correct because it's is short for it is.
In the sentence, It's up to you to decide, It's is used as a contraction for It is. It's used correctly here.
Roses' with an apostrophe is plural possessive. Roses is just the plural. Plurals, when written correctly, do not have an apostrophe. Adding an apostrophe makes the plural possessive.An example of roses' is use would be The roses' water in the vase needs to be topped up.
No there's no apostrophe. For example:Can I borrow your book please?It's easy to get mixed up with you're.You're is the contraction of "you are". For example:You're going to pay for that!This can also be written as:You are going to pay for that!
"Sizing" means judging what size someone is, as if you were measuring them for clothing. If you "size someone up," you measure them as a person and decide what kind of person they are. "Sized him up right" would mean that they had decided correctly.
That would be a contraction!
In the sentence, It's up to you to decide, It's is used as a contraction for It is. It's used correctly here.
It's up to you to decide what to do. The apostrophe is almost never used to form plurals, but rather possessives. The apostrophe is used to indicate a contraction (it is) in the first sentence.
Roses' with an apostrophe is plural possessive. Roses is just the plural. Plurals, when written correctly, do not have an apostrophe. Adding an apostrophe makes the plural possessive.An example of roses' is use would be The roses' water in the vase needs to be topped up.
For plural nouns, use an apostrophe s after the existing s.Examples:Don't pull on cats' tails.Those were the boys' tests.I'll take you up to the girls' room.
No there's no apostrophe. For example:Can I borrow your book please?It's easy to get mixed up with you're.You're is the contraction of "you are". For example:You're going to pay for that!This can also be written as:You are going to pay for that!
The three-letter word that has an apostrophe after the first letter is "I'm" which is short for "I am." It's a common contraction used in English to combine the pronoun "I" with the verb "am." Hope that clears things up for you!
The correct phrasing is "set up correctly."
To clarify - does an apostrophe face a certain way? I have seen most that seem to be straight up and down and I have seen some that seem to face to the left. I recently had some type set for a cup imprint and the copy contained Class of '66. Typesetter had the apostrophe facing right like a single quotation mark which did not look correct to me. He said it was the font..Would this be a correct usage?
"Sizing" means judging what size someone is, as if you were measuring them for clothing. If you "size someone up," you measure them as a person and decide what kind of person they are. "Sized him up right" would mean that they had decided correctly.
No, it's "to".
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Well, honey, technically speaking, if you're trying to show possession, then yes, you need an apostrophe before the "s" in "Robinson's." But if you're just talking about the Robinson family as a whole, then you can skip the apostrophe and just say "Welcome to the Robinsons." Hope that clears things up for ya!