Women is an irregular plural noun, and should be punctuated as "women's" to show possession. Example: The women's signs danced and waved in the air.
Use the apostrophe right after the letter s: fighters'
Use an apostrophe in the word only if you are using the contraction of the two words it and is. It's time to go! It was wagging its tail.
there is no apostrophe
There is no contraction for the word apostrophe. It's is a contraction of it is or it has.
The word o'er is an apostrophe of omission. It left out the v in over.
The word is correctly punctuated as "women's."
The word "women" in its plural form does not have an apostrophe before or after. The correct plural form is "women."
The word "states" does not require an apostrophe for pluralization. It remains as "states" in its plural form.
Use the apostrophe right after the letter s: fighters'
It should be: buildings'
Use an apostrophe in the word only if you are using the contraction of the two words it and is. It's time to go! It was wagging its tail.
Ladies' dresses 'Ladies' is the plural form of 'lady'. The word changes completely in the plural (ie not 'ladys') so the apostrophe must go after the entire word.
If you put the apostrophe after the letter 's' (womens') you will be adding the letter 's' to the word women (which is already the plural of the word woman) and mispelling it. The correct way is: women's.
No, the word "holidays" does not have an apostrophe.
The correct posesive of womens is women's. When used in the beginnng of a sentence it would be capitalized.
"Archaeologist" doesn't require an apostrophe.
One man's hobby