The word 'years' is plural, so it must be followed by 'are', not 'is'. 'The years are passing quickly now that I am old.' not 'The years is passing quickly now that I am old.' An example of the correct way to use the word years in a sentence is like this: Has the year passed? There are 365 days in a year. WOW! The years went fast!
The job belongs to last year as it was, so it is a possessive. So there is an apostrophe needed between year and s, so it does not indicate a plural. The correct form is: Last year's job.
Once a year is correct.
20-year warranty would be correct: 20-year is a compound adjective applied to warranty.
The plural noun is years. To spell out year names, use the hundreds of years, followed by the last two digits as a number. (Use "oh" for a leading zero) 1840 = eighteen forty 1700 = seventeen hundred 1901 = nineteen oh one 2012 = twenty twelve Even thousands are spoken as thousands: 2000 is "two thousand."
years or year's
Microsoft was founded in April 4, 1975 and will be 35 years old stand correct as of 2010
years - an apostophe is only needed in contractions and possesions, not plurals. by the way - once i saw a t-shirt that said "Prepositions are not words to end sentences with" - and "with" is a preposition! 4 years
The correct form is, "this year's play".
No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.No. A year is in reality 365.25 days, not 365 days, so the extra day every 4 years just makes up for those parts. So your birthday is correct throughout your life.
every 4 years
The correct grammar between 'an 8 year old' or an '8 years old child' is 'an 8 year old child'.
The correct abbreviation is LY.- A kilo light-year is KLY.(1,000 light-years).- A mega light-year MLY.(1 million light-years).- A giga light-year is GLY.(1 billion light-years).
No there are loads of years when you are about 8-9 you will be in year 4.
No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.No they don't. They help keep it correct. 1900 was not a leap year, though it is divisible by 4, but not having that extra day kept things in line. The rules for leap years, that meant it was not one, were designed to be that way.
The correct way is to write New Year's Eve.
The correct phrasing would be "B years' experience," indicating that the experience spans multiple years.