Yes, it is correct if you are speaking about the boss of more than one secretary (the plural possessive form.) If you were speaking of the boss of one secretary the proper spelling would be secretary's.
The plural of secretary is secretaries.
The possessive of secretary is secretary's.
The plural possessive of secretary is secretaries' (I have heard that secretaries's is technically correct, but I find it cumbersome myself.)
In general the possessive form of words ending in S is that word with an apostrophe on the end.
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If the sentence is: "You were watching TV when the phone rang." Then that is correct.
Yes, the sentence "I will give you a call" is grammatically correct. It means that in the future, the speaker intends to contact the listener by phone.
It is almost correct: it simply needs an article before the word phone, to make the sentence "Yours is the briefcase with the phone ringing inside." This sentence could be the answer to the question, "Which briefcase is mine?""The briefcase with the phone ringing inside is yours" is a more common construction, however.
"Can you watch the desk for me?" is a correct sentence. It means, "If someone approaches the desk can you answer his or her questions?" It also means, "If the phone rings, "Can you answer it." It has nothing to do with looking at the desk!
Is this your personal cell phone, or is it owned by your employer? If the former, NO they have no right. If the latter, it is not YOUR phone, it is THEIR phone, and as such they have the right to inspect the phone.
The preposition at is used before an object of the preposition in a sentence. It should not be used at the end of a sentence. Examples: "I was at the store." - Correct (store is the object of the preposition.) "Prepositions should not be used at the end of a sentence." - Correct (end is the object of the preposition that goes with at.) "Where is my phone at?" - Incorrect Instead, one would say, "Where is my phone?"
no by law an employer can not search your cell phone unless he or she has a search warrant
The correct punctuation for the sentence "George Gray said, 'Mary Beth is on the phone.'" is to place a comma after "said" and to use single quotation marks around "Mary Beth is on the phone."
Yes, that's a complete sentence. Maybe somebody you really want to hear from will call tomorrow.
Yes, absolutely your employer can monitor non-personal phone calls. You automatically give consent by working for the employer because you're doing the work the employer hired you to do.
Well, honey, the correct phrase is "I didn't hear the phone ring." The verb "ring" should be in the base form without the "-ed" at the end because it's already preceded by "did." So next time, just remember to keep it simple and drop that unnecessary "ed" like a bad habit.
yes he/she can