No, the word eyes is the plural form of the noun eye.
An apostrophe is used to indicate possession, for example:
One eye's color is different than the other. (singular possessive, the color of one eye)
All of their eyes' attention was on the screen. (plural possessive, the attention of the eyes of all)
Eye is singular, meaning just one eye.
Eyes is plural, meaning more than one eye. Example: Humans have two eyes.
Eyes' (apostrophe after) is plural possessive. Example: The eyes' pupils were large.
Lewis'
Yes it should be eyeglass' lens because the lens belong to the eyeglasses
A possessive apostrophe is an apostrophe used at the end of a noun, forming a possessive noun.A possessive noun is a noun indicating ownership or possession.Possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe -s to the end of the word, or just an apostrophe to plural nouns that already end with -s. Examples:the car of my mother = my mother's carthe teacher of our class = our class's teacherthe coats of the children = the children's coatsthe covers of the books = the books' coversthe meeting of the bosses = the bosses' meetingThe possessive is also used as shorthand for something that does not literally belong to that person or thing, it's used in place of 'of' or 'for'. Examples:The ladies' room does not belong to ladies, it means that it is designated for the use of ladies.A store that sells men's suits doesn't sell suits that belong to some men, it sells suits for men.A book of Shakespeare's plays are not plays that belong to Mr. Shakespeare, they are plays written by him.
A possessive apostrophe is an apostrophe used at the end of a noun, forming a possessive noun.A possessive noun is a noun indicating ownership or possession.Possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe -s to the end of the word, or just an apostrophe to plural nouns that already end with -s. Examples:the car of my mother = my mother's carthe teacher of our class = our class's teacherthe coats of the children = the children's coatsthe covers of the books = the books' coversthe meeting of the bosses = the bosses' meetingThe possessive is also used as shorthand for something that does not literally belong to that person or thing, it's used in place of 'of' or 'for'. Examples:The ladies' room does not belong to ladies, it means that it is designated for the use of ladies.A store that sells men's suits doesn't sell suits that belong to some men, it sells suits for men.A book of Shakespeare's plays are not plays that belong to Mr. Shakespeare, they are plays written by him.
The possessive apostrophe. Does the party belong to Emmerson? or is the Party made up of multiple Emmersons? If the former you need it, the other you do not - but the construction would be odd - a Party of Emmersons being better in the second case.
Yes. It should be "cat's eyes".
There is no apostrophe because the day doesn't belong to veterans.
Glasses' rim.
The eyes belong to the Nervous system.
Lewis'
No because the apostrophe doesn't belong. It is plural so no apostrophe is needed
It should be: camels' bodies
Yes, the phrase "This Year's Honorees" does need an apostrophe. The apostrophe indicates possession or belonging, showing that the honorees belong to or are associated with "This Year."
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.
The eyes are connected to and part of the nervous system.
Yes it should be eyeglass' lens because the lens belong to the eyeglasses
i think her eyes are green in the music video.