No. It isn't needed there.
It is correct where you put it.
Yes, the sentence does need an apostrophe. The correct sentence should be: "It took several hours' hard work to repair the damage." The apostrophe is used to show possession or ownership by indicating that the hard work belongs to the hours.
"It's" is a contraction for "it is'. The possessive pronoun is written "its" (no apostrophe).The best way to decide which word to use is to try using "it is" instead. If the sentence still reads correctly then use "it's" (with the apostrophe. If it doesn't make sense with "it is" and the sentence implies possession, use "its" (no apostrophe). For example, which is correct?The dog ate it's dinner.The dog ate its dinner.If you change "it's" to "it is" the first sentence becomes "The dog ate it is dinner.", which is gibberish. Also the sentence implies that the dinner belongs to the dog. Therefore the second version, with no apostrophe, is correct.
No, the pronoun 'I' is always capitalized. The first word of a sentence is always capitalized. A contraction always requires an apostrophe. The correct form is:I'm rooting for you all.
"Each of the boys' are writing a different story."The first mistake is to say "Each are." If you're talking about each one, the correct verb is "Each is writing."The second is to try to use an apostrophe to make a plural. The apostrophe indicates possession, not plural. The correct sentence would be "Each of the boys is writing a different story."
No, the apostrophe in "it's" is incorrect. The correct form is "its" without an apostrophe, as "its" is the possessive form of "it."
yes it is
Yes.
Yes if a possession and name of the person are in the same sentence
It is correct where you put it.
The correct sentence would be:This is Luke's book.If Luke ended in an s, the apostrophe would be after the s ; since it doesn't, an apostrophe and then an s must be added for possession.Example: Jesus' disciples, John's disciples....
No you don't! Horses does not need an apostrophe.
the dinosaurs' heads there i think.
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 correct sentence should be: "The women's coats are here." In this case, the apostrophe goes before the "s" to show that the coats belong to the women.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "gardeners."
No. It should be Neil Armstrong's footprint.