Yes, an apostrophe can be used with capital letters, particularly in contractions and possessives. For example, "It's John's book" shows a contraction with "It’s" and possession with "John's." Additionally, when indicating possession for a proper noun, you would write "The Smiths' house." The use of an apostrophe with capital letters follows the same grammatical rules as with lowercase letters.
what words have 4 letters and an apostrophe
o'clock is short for "of the clock". The apostrophe indicates that there are letters missing.
It's
The "no" in cannot.
ax
An apostrophe is used to show that letters were dropped in a contract. This is known as an apostrophe for contractions, where the omitted letters are replaced by the apostrophe.
what words have 4 letters and an apostrophe
An apostrophe is used in a contraction to represent that letters have been removed. In the word can't the apostrophe is taking the place of the letters "no". In the word don't the apostrophe is also taking the place of the letter "o".
The apostrophe represents the missing letter or letters.
The apostrophe in "they'd" stands for the missing letters in "they would" or "they had."
An apologetic apostrophe is an apostrophe added to a word in the Scots language or dialect to give the appearance of a contraction of an originally English word - for example, the words gi'e (give), ba' (ball), or ca' (call).
o'clock is short for "of the clock". The apostrophe indicates that there are letters missing.
When did "the nations capital" lose its apostrophe...
"Yo'" has an apostrophe because it is a shortened form of "your". The apostrophe represents the missing letters u and r.
to indicate missing letters
It's
An apostrophe "stands in" for missing letters in a contraction. o'clock is a contraction of "of the clock" and the apostrophe indicates the missing letters.