It depends on the number of Marines. The rifle belonging to a Marine would the Marine's rifle. If you are talking about multiple Marines it would be Semper Fi is the Marines' unofficial motto.
I am assuming you are referring a U.S. cent and not the British coin that "really" is called a penny. Here are some links below for "1793 U.S. cent" to the left showing a picture.
Impressionism avoided showing many details.
Bahrain is governed under Islamic laws and traditions, but the people are open and accepting of others as long as certain guidelines are followed. Some of those rules are that possession and consumption of alcohol and drugs are against the law, dress should be conservative, public displays of affection are considered indecent, and that showing disrespect to the Islamic religion is highly offensive and can result in fines or a jail sentence.
Showing the struggles of working people
Showing no mercy and not giving up on something.
An apostrophe is typically used before the "s" to indicate possession or contraction. For possession, the apostrophe is placed before the "s" when showing that something belongs to someone or something (e.g., John's book). For contractions, the apostrophe is used before the "s" in shortened forms of words (e.g., it's for "it is").
To show possession, add apostrophe s: county's.
Referring to the home of your grandparents you would apostrophise the s - your grandparent's home.
The apostrophe in "rhinoceros" to show possession should go after the "s", making it "rhinoceros'".
I am an English major. If you are not showing possession, then there is no apostrophe. You are just showing plurality of your family. Therefore, The Cokers is correct. Oddly enough, most of the cards I receive, use the apostrophe and I always think, "This is not showing possession"..haha:)
Yes, though it is not normally used in pronouns.
The homophone of "there" is "their." "There" refers to a place or location, while "their" is a pronoun showing possession or belonging to a group of people.
By taking care helping and by showing adeep sense of possession for the dear ones
Do you have any other ways of showing that you own something?
Use an apostrophe if you want to show possession. Example: grandma's garden
To show possession for several names, you typically add an apostrophe followed by an "s" for plural nouns that do not end in "s" (e.g., "the children's toys"). For plural nouns that do end in "s," you simply add an apostrophe after the "s" (e.g., "the teachers' lounge"). If you are referring to joint possession, use the apostrophe with the last name only (e.g., "John and Sarah's house"), but if each person individually possesses something, use the apostrophe with each name (e.g., "John's and Sarah's houses").
I'm sure that there are methods to correct these records - some type of form or similar. If you have possession of the document yo are referring to, yYou will probably need to submit a copy of it.