It's written as she'd.
You don't write it as an apostrophe; you write it as a contraction. "It's" is a contraction of it is and it has.
we're
there is no apostrophe
The dog chased its tail. Its is the possessive but does not need an apostrophe. It's, with the apostrophe, means it is.
We would. Apostrophe=woul[d]
To correctly write a year with an apostrophe, you would place the apostrophe before the last two digits of the year. For example, 1990 would be written as '90.
The contractionI'dcan mean either "I would" or "I had."
To write the year with an apostrophe, you would place the apostrophe before the last two digits of the year. For example, '21 for the year 2021.
To write the year with an apostrophe correctly, you should place the apostrophe before the last two digits of the year. For example, 2021 would be written as '21.
You don't write it as an apostrophe; you write it as a contraction. "It's" is a contraction of it is and it has.
You would write "where'd" as in "Where'd we park the car?"
The correct way to write "Fridays" with an apostrophe depends on the context. If you are indicating possession, such as "Friday's meeting," you would place the apostrophe before the "s." If referring to multiple Fridays, such as "Fridays' events," and indicating something belonging to multiple Fridays, you would place the apostrophe after the "s."
You can write "might have" in a contraction form with an apostrophe as "might've."
We've
She's
we're
For the sentence provided, you would not need an apostrophe because possession is being shown with the possessive pronoun "their."