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The word monkey is a common singular noun. It requires no apostrophe.

The monkey liked his food.


If the word monkey has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.

The monkey's food sat uneaten.


The plural is monkeys; plural possessive is monkeys', such as monkeys' food.

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9y ago

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Related Questions

Does monkeys require an apostrophe?

Not if you're talking about more than one monkey. You use an apostrophe to make a noun possessive. The monkey's behavior is odd, for example.


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<improved answer> The singular possessive form of monkey is monkey's. For a singular possession to be shown, you would formulate the sentence to show that the monkey has something (possession) or owns something (possession) by adding an apostrophe after monkey. Example: The monkey's hair was blonde.


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Ah, a lovely question indeed! The possessive noun of "monkey" is "monkey's." Just add an apostrophe and an "s" after the noun to show that something belongs to the monkey. Isn't that just delightful?


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