None. There should be no apostrophe in one of its kind because its is a possessive pronoun.
As a plural, for more than one dad; no, does not need an apostrophe. As a possessive, as in the item belonging to dad, then yes, it does need an apostrophe.
It is an apostrophe, and one example of use is: you're for you are.
There isn't one.
The apostrophe in a contraction holds the place of one or more letters omitted from the conjoining of two words.
As you've written it, there's no apostrophe and is not meant o be one. But you might be asking what is the contracted form of you will, in which case the answer is you'll.
An apostrophe is added to contractions.
There is no contraction (no apostrophe is used). The slang short form is kinda.
won'tAdditional answerIt's not true to say that won't is in an apostrophe. Apostrophe is the little comma that goes into words where one or more letters have been omitted and won't is the contracted form of will not.^I think they know what an apostrophe is! They were asking what 'will not' was when it was shortened with an apostrophe.
You don't have an apostrophe in your sentence. You don't need one either.
Apostrophe has only one name. It's apostrophe. The plural is apostrophes.
No. One's = one is.
As a plural, for more than one dad; no, does not need an apostrophe. As a possessive, as in the item belonging to dad, then yes, it does need an apostrophe.
It is an apostrophe, and one example of use is: you're for you are.
There isn't one.
it is called an apostrophe.
One should never use an apostrophe for the word that.One should always use an apostrophe for the word that's, meaning that is.
If you're talking about more than one employee, then don't use an apostrophe. Plural words should never have an apostrophe. If you're talking about something that belongs to a single employee (such as "the employee's computer") then you need an apostrophe.