No, "Im" needs an apostrophe: *I'm getting bored here - is this correct?*
There's is a contraction of "there is" and requires an apostrophe.
There are two grammatically-correct ways of saying this. (1) The floor needs sweeping. (2) The floor needs to be swept. Alternatively, the sentence can be completely rearranged as follows: (3) Someone needs to sweep the floor.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
Since an apostrophe has no sound of its own, the possessive of plurals ending is -s is pronounced the same as the nominative. I know that the correct way to spell it is twins'....however I would like to know how you pronounce the word when used in a sentence. For example: The twins' room needs to be bigger.
The sentence is almost correct but needs proper punctuation. It should be written as "The crowd marched for women's rights," with an apostrophe in "women's" to indicate possession. This signifies that the rights belong to women.
Mikes needs an apostrophe. So the sentence would be: "Mike's car needs a new muffler and new brakes."
No, "Im" needs an apostrophe: *I'm getting bored here - is this correct?*
No, the sentence needs a verb. The correct way: How does it look?
A subject
There's is a contraction of "there is" and requires an apostrophe.
Audra's Sweets. The sweets belong to Audra, so she needs the apostrophe. There's more than one sweet, so it gets the "s" but no apostrophe.
The first thing you do before correcting a sentence would be read it. Then you would need to correct what needs to be.
"Can't wait to have all this stuff on hand" can be correct or wrong depending on the context. "Cant" needs an apostrophe as it is a contraction.
There are two grammatically-correct ways of saying this. (1) The floor needs sweeping. (2) The floor needs to be swept. Alternatively, the sentence can be completely rearranged as follows: (3) Someone needs to sweep the floor.
A simple sentence need both subject and predicate to agree to be correct.
A simple sentence.