Referring to the home of your grandparents you would apostrophise the s - your grandparent's home.
The apostrophe should be placed as follows: "your grandparents' farm." This indicates that the farm belongs to your grandparents.
No, there is no apostrophe after the 's' in "Grandparents Day." The term is already possessive with the 's' indicating that the day is dedicated to all grandparents.
No, the word "grandparents" does not require an apostrophe. The plural form is used without any punctuation marks.
My grandparents' house was burglarized.I inherited my grandparents' 1946 car.Children need their grandparents' attention.A child's grandparents' wisdom and guidance are often useful.
In Virginia, a 17-year-old is considered a minor and must have parental consent to live with another adult, such as grandparents. If the parents approve, the teenager can live with their grandparents without legal issues.
The apostrophe should be placed as follows: "your grandparents' farm." This indicates that the farm belongs to your grandparents.
No, there is no apostrophe after the 's' in "Grandparents Day." The term is already possessive with the 's' indicating that the day is dedicated to all grandparents.
No, the word "grandparents" does not require an apostrophe. The plural form is used without any punctuation marks.
Usually no. Yes however if describing something that belongs to them.
My grandparents' house was burglarized.I inherited my grandparents' 1946 car.Children need their grandparents' attention.A child's grandparents' wisdom and guidance are often useful.
Yes, you would use an apostrophe after "s" to indicate possession when referring to the house belonging to two grandparents. It would be written as "grandparents' house."
No it is not. It is either grandparent's (belonging to one grandparent) or grandparents' (belonging to more than one of them).
No. Grandparents is the plural form of the word, meaning it is a day to celebrate for more than one grandparent. Grandparent's is the possessive form of the word, meaning the day would belong to a single grandparent.
Grandchildren is already the plural form of grandchild.
No, a minor can not move out of their grandparents home if they have guardianship. The minor will have to live with the grandparents until their 18th birthday.
it's nearly home time
mother's The apostrophe s can substitute for "has" or "is" or "was"; it can also mark possession. My mother's shoes. In this case, apostrophe s does not abbreviate anything. My mother's bought cookies. In this case, apostrophe s abbreviates "has". My mother has bought cookies. My mother's home. In this case, apostrophe s abbreviates "is". My mother is home.