If you are referring to something belonging to Monday.
no There should never be an apostrophe in "never".
it's is a abbreviation of it is so it should have an apostrophe
No. Harringtons doesn't need an apostrophe.
The word Monday is a proper singular noun. It requires no apostrophe.I have a test on Monday.If the word Monday has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.Monday's deadline was coming too soon.No one looked forward to Monday's schedule.Note: Mondays, plural, would be Mondays' as the possessive.
If the word ends in apostrophe s or ends in s apostrophe, then there is NO space before or after the apostrophe, but always a space before the next word.
2nd Monday's would indicate that the Mondays owned something. The plural of Monday is Mondays. No apostrophe.
it's is a abbreviation of it is so it should have an apostrophe
no There should never be an apostrophe in "never".
It should not have an apostrophe.
If showing a day's possession, yes. (e.g. Tuesday's child) If pluralizing a day of the week, no. (e.g. two Mondays)
No. Harringtons doesn't need an apostrophe.
Should not = shouldn't
Yes, the sentence should have an apostrophe to denote possession. It should be written as: "Linda and her vice presidents' are going to Brazil."
No there shouldn't be an apostrophe.
No, Morrisons should not have an apostrophe in its name. It is a plural possessive noun.
The apostrophe indicates possession. So, no apostrophe.
The apostrophe in "its" should not be placed after the s. "Its" is a possessive pronoun and does not require an apostrophe to show possession.