You should write daughter's if you are talking about one daughter, e.g. "it is my daughter's birthday tomorrow".
You should write daughters' if you are talking about more than one daughter at the same time, e.g. "this is our daughters' bedroom, which they share".
Yes, that is correct. Program belongs to year.
no!!! jUST USE THE CORRECT TECHNICAL LANGUAGE.
No, that is not the correct spelling.The correct spelling is punctuation.An example sentence is:It is important to use the correct punctuation when writing an essay.
Clearly you aren't writing in English to correct you, so I don't see why I should wright in English to correct me.
Use of the ampersand (&) in writing is a spelling mistake. Not acceptable unless you're trying to be funny.
The correct voice to use when writing an abstract is typically the third person, passive voice.
It's either my daughters and me or my daughters and I, depending on the sentence. Here are two correct usages:He introduced my daughters and me to the President.My daughters and I were introduced to the President.The phrase me and my daughters is one that should not be used.
Yes, that is correct. Program belongs to year.
It depends upon the context. If you are using it as a subject, it would be "my daughters and I." If you are using it as the object of a preposition, it would be "my daughters and me." Examples: My daughters and I walked to the store with John. John walked to the store with my daughters and me.
So they can erase and correct their mistakes made. This will improve their hand writing.
The correct plural possessive form for "daughter's" is "daughters'."
no!!! jUST USE THE CORRECT TECHNICAL LANGUAGE.
The correct order for writing the name of a compound is element-symbol subscript followed by the element and subscript (e.g., H2O for water).
No, that is not the correct spelling.The correct spelling is punctuation.An example sentence is:It is important to use the correct punctuation when writing an essay.
Because it's a contraction of "it is." For formal speech or writing, "It is" is more correct.
I believe the correct tense you would use is present tense.
The correct AP Style guideline for writing temperatures in degrees is to use numerals and the degree symbol (), with no space between the number and the symbol. For example, 32C.