In the case of nouns or proper nouns (like James) which end in an s, then either James' or James's is acceptable. It it almost a matter of personal preference. In England there is a St James' Park (Newcastle) and St James's Park (London).
It should be "you're welcome." Which is "You are welcome" when written in full.
The proper usage is "Lee's" as it indicates possession or belonging to Lee. So, the correct phrase would be "Lee's that" to show that something belongs to Lee.
The correct answer is "You're Welcome." Because technically, if you took out the apostrophe, it would say "you are welcome."
Yes as it is the possessive form. As the phrase is referring to just one of the names in the partnership, the apostrophe should be placed thus:- PARTNER'S NAME If instead you had been asking about all of the names in the partnership, the apostrophe should be placed thus:- PARTNERS' NAMES
The correct phrase is "happy holidays" without an apostrophe. "Happy holidays" is a common greeting used to wish someone well during the holiday season.
Momma's Boy Pizza
"If you're lucky" is the correct spelling of the phrase. Since you mean to write, "If you are lucky," you must include the apostrophe to indicate the contraction.
It should be "you're welcome." Which is "You are welcome" when written in full.
No, there is no apostrophe in the phrase "21st century."
Yes. The phrase means the honorees of this year.
The apostrophe is correct on the word men's. But with a plural noun, the possessions or belongings must be plural, too, and the verb changes as well.The man's uniform was dirty.The men's uniforms were dirty.
The proper usage is "Lee's" as it indicates possession or belonging to Lee. So, the correct phrase would be "Lee's that" to show that something belongs to Lee.
The apostrophe belongs in the phrase as "the glasses' rim" to indicate that the rim belongs to the glasses.
The correct answer is "You're Welcome." Because technically, if you took out the apostrophe, it would say "you are welcome."
Yes as it is the possessive form. As the phrase is referring to just one of the names in the partnership, the apostrophe should be placed thus:- PARTNER'S NAME If instead you had been asking about all of the names in the partnership, the apostrophe should be placed thus:- PARTNERS' NAMES
The correct phrase is "happy holidays" without an apostrophe. "Happy holidays" is a common greeting used to wish someone well during the holiday season.
The correct phrase is "sorry for your family's loss." The apostrophe indicates possession, meaning the loss belongs to the family. Using "families" (plural) would be incorrect in this context.