Neither. Apostrophes are used to make nouns possessive and to form contractions.
No, only use an apostrophe when using a contraction or a possessive
'09 In this case, the apostrophe is taking the place of "20" so it goes before the 09.
there is no apostrophe in the word cyclist.
No, the correct way to write it is "associate's degree" with an apostrophe before the "s."
In British English, the speech marks typically come before the full stop. In American English, they usually come before the closing punctuation mark. It's important to be consistent within the style guide you are following.
It should go after the full stop.
.?! --------------------- the coma , the full stop . the query ? the colon : the semicolon ; the apostrophe ' the quotation mark " the exclamation mark !
If the word ends in apostrophe s or ends in s apostrophe, then there is NO space before or after the apostrophe, but always a space before the next word.
no a full stop would be used in place of a colon. Either use a full stop or a colon but never use both
If the full stop is at the end of the initials then there should be a space before the next word.
No, only use an apostrophe when using a contraction or a possessive
'09 In this case, the apostrophe is taking the place of "20" so it goes before the 09.
If it is required, the apostrophe would come after the Z but before the S. "This is Mr. Buzz's stinger!"
The full wording is "of the clock" so the apostrophe is showing that some characters have been omitted.
Personally, no. But it's not incorrect to put the apostrophe.
No. If the sheriff possesses something, it is the sheriff's with an apostrophe before the "s."
As long as it takes to make a full stop and viewing that it is safe to pull out.