The Erlich family of Southern California spells the plural Erlichs. See the link below.
The job belongs to last year as it was, so it is a possessive. So there is an apostrophe needed between year and s, so it does not indicate a plural. The correct form is: Last year's job.
Without the last E (i.e., tablecloths). Cloths for the table, not clothes for the table.
That is the correct spelling (with hyphen) of the adjective "last-minute."
There's no such thing as the "correct" spelling of a name. I've seen my own last name spelled at least ten different ways and while I think the one I use is obviously the correct one, I suspect the people who use the others feel the same way about their spelling.
No, that is not the correct spelling at all. "Actident" does not exist in the English language.The correct spelling is accident.For example:"He was involved in an accident"."There was an accident on the motorway last night".
The only correct plural for French is French. "Frenches", as you say, or 'Frenchies' is a derogatory slang term.
Francises Francis's would be if they own something e.g. The Francis's TV
It would be... example: Johnsons the correct spelling would be Johnsons'
'les Duclos' Tonight we dine at the Duclos' > ce soir nous mangeons chez les Duclos. There is no plural spelling for last names in French : write 'les Bonaparte, les Dupont, les Dumoulin'
The job belongs to last year as it was, so it is a possessive. So there is an apostrophe needed between year and s, so it does not indicate a plural. The correct form is: Last year's job.
Without the last E (i.e., tablecloths). Cloths for the table, not clothes for the table.
The correct spelling of the adverb is finally (last, or at last).
The plural form of the proper noun Diaz is the Diazes.The plural possessive form is Diazes'.Example: The Diazes' children are twins.
That is the correct spelling (with hyphen) of the adjective "last-minute."
The correct spelling is finally (at last, completely).
I am not aware it is a last name, but if it is, it probably comes from the Argonauts story, I guess it is spelled the same, "Jason".
You would just say the Kostakis family.