When it's showing something that Monday is possessing. Monday's weather was fantastic, for example.
If you are referring to something belonging to Monday.
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.
you dont use an apostrophe in will not
You would use the apostrophe because it is possessive. Gavin and Jedine's Wedding
there is no apostrophe
2nd Monday's would indicate that the Mondays owned something. The plural of Monday is Mondays. No apostrophe.
If you are referring to something belonging to Monday.
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.
To contract "must" and "not," you would use an apostrophe to combine them into "mustn't."
They'd
There is not apostrophe in June. But, there would be apostrophe in the following example: June's car was totaled in the accident.
no
No, the word Monday is not a possessive noun. Monday is a singular, proper, abstract noun.A noun shows possession by adding an apostrophe -s to the end of the word, or just an apostrophe to the end of some plural nouns that already ends with an -s.The possessive form for the noun Monday is Monday's.
For singular possession, it would be customer's.For plural possession, it would be customers'.An apostrophe would not be placed on its own after the word customer.
No, it's not necessary. Your already shows possession. Use apostrophe after a noun and not a pronoun. Example: That's your money.
you dont use an apostrophe in will not
You would use the apostrophe because it is possessive. Gavin and Jedine's Wedding