Apostrophes never form a plural.
An apostrophe is used to show possession; to show that something belongs to the possessive noun. Using an apostrophe to show possession by a plural name (a proper noun) is exactly the same as using the apostrophe to show possession for any noun ending in -s.The best way to tell if you should just put an apostrophe after the existing -s or to add the apostrophe -s after the existing -s is if extra syllable is pronounced or not. Most often, the extra syllable created by adding the additional -s to plurals names does not work. For example:Chris, Chris's classmates: two Chrises, the Chrises' classmatesBess's and Bess's birthday: two Besses, the Besses' birthdaysThe Brown family, the Browns' house.The Jones family, the Joneses' dog
Yes, it two years' experience Whenever you're wondering whether a phrase like this needs an apostrophe, try mentally substituting "one" for "two" (or whatever other number is in the phrase you're wondering about). "Two years' experience" and "two years experience" sound the same -- but "one year's experience" and "one year experience" are easy to tell apart. And of course you'd say "one year's experience." You'd also say "one week's notice" and "one dollar's worth." Just remember, when it's a plural, put the apostrophe after the "s," where it belongs on a plural possessive.
Well I can't tell because you haven't written the question :P
Here is an example of a possessive noun: "That is Danny'sbook."This sentence is expressing that the book belongs to Danny. "Danny" is made possessive by adding an apostrophe and an "s" after "Danny."(I think you thought the apostrophe was called a "comma." A comma is used to separate phrases, as I just did now. Some people refer to apostrophes as "flying commas" because they look like commas that are flying in the air. However, it is important to remember that commas and apostrophes serve very different grammatical purposes.)As I showed above, to make a singular noun possessive, add an apostrophe and "s." If you wish to make a plural noun that already ends in "s" possessive, add an apostrophe and omit the "s." For example: "Do not steal the cats' food, for they are very hungry." This avoids the awkward construction "cats's."Be careful no to apply this rule to plural nouns that do NOT end in "s." For example: "The children's toys are very colorful."There is some debate when it comes to making a name ending in "s" possessive. For instance, some people prefer to write, "Don't go near the Jones's house!" Personally, I like to write, "Don't go near the Jones' house!" I think the former style has evolved from the fact that we often pronounce the sentence that way, even if it was not originally written as such. As far as I can tell, at the moment both styles are grammatically acceptable, so just pick whichever one suits you best.
If you really meant cupola (in architecture, a small dome on a roof or ceiling) the plural is cupolas. Cupolae is also correct, though seldom used.If you did indeed mean copula:In linguistics, a copula is a word used to link the subject with a predicate in a sentence. In English it is usually a verb. The plural is copulas or copulae.Note: Focus on the position of the o and u to tell the words apart.
They have an apostrophe: Taylor's jeans are torn. The cats' scratching post is worn out
"The rockets roar sent shivers (down my back?)" can be punctuated in two ways, depending upon whether it is more than one rocket. Singular : "THe rocket's roar sent shivers..." Plural : "The rockets' roar sent shivers..." Like many "fill in the punctuation" questions, there is no way to tell if the S is to make the subject plural or to form a possessive. If there were no S, you would add "apostrophe S" to rocket. If the plural form were irregular (e.g. "The potatoes skin had been removed"), then it would be obvious that the subject is plural and an apostrophe only is added. (some style sheets require the S even where redundant)
Possessive have apostrophes so you can easily tell they are stating ownership. For example, Bob's garden is easier to tell you mean possession then Bobs garden in which you may misunderstand as a plural, the garden of two Bobs.
An apostrophe is used to show possession; to show that something belongs to the possessive noun. Using an apostrophe to show possession by a plural name (a proper noun) is exactly the same as using the apostrophe to show possession for any noun ending in -s.The best way to tell if you should just put an apostrophe after the existing -s or to add the apostrophe -s after the existing -s is if extra syllable is pronounced or not. Most often, the extra syllable created by adding the additional -s to plurals names does not work. For example:Chris, Chris's classmates: two Chrises, the Chrises' classmatesBess's and Bess's birthday: two Besses, the Besses' birthdaysThe Brown family, the Browns' house.The Jones family, the Joneses' dog
you know if it has an apostrophe at the end then an sThe usual way to make nouns plural is to add -s. eg one boy/ two boysBut if the noun already ends in -s or -x or -ch or -sh then add add -es.eg bus - buses, box - boxes, peach - peaches, bush - bushes.Also some nouns are irregular, they have separate words for the plural form egman - men, woman - women, leaf - leaves, loaf - loaves.So you can tell if a noun is plural by it's form.Or you can tell it is plural by the context of the sentence.eg The sheep all escaped from the pen. In this sentence the noun sheep must be plural because all ( more than one ) escaped.The sheep ate the grass I gave him. In this sentence sheep must be singular because the pronoun him is used and him is a singular pronoun (compare to them = plural)
Yes, it two years' experience Whenever you're wondering whether a phrase like this needs an apostrophe, try mentally substituting "one" for "two" (or whatever other number is in the phrase you're wondering about). "Two years' experience" and "two years experience" sound the same -- but "one year's experience" and "one year experience" are easy to tell apart. And of course you'd say "one year's experience." You'd also say "one week's notice" and "one dollar's worth." Just remember, when it's a plural, put the apostrophe after the "s," where it belongs on a plural possessive.
They are completely different words. Were is the plural past tense of the word 'are." Where is a word to tell a person or thing's location, and wear is a verb to tell what someone has on.
The possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe s ('s) after the o at the end of the word.Examples:The piano's leg was cracked.We enjoyed the soprano's performance.You can tell the photo's age by the hairstyle.We can eat at Rocko's Steakhouse.
question doesn't make sense. Third parties? (plural?)
plural nouns are nouns that tell a person place thing or idea
They are completely different words. Were is the plural past tense of the word 'are." Where is a word to tell a person or thing's location, and wear is a verb to tell what someone has on.
The apostrophe has two functions: to indicate missing letters due to contraction or abbreviation, and to indicate the possessive. I can't tell you which of the two is the apostrophe's main function. (The previous sentence uses both: "can't" is a contraction and "apostrophe's" is a possessive)