Yes.
No, the plural form of "day" is "days" and does not require an apostrophe. An apostrophe is used to show possession or contraction, not to form plurals.
I believe it should have an apostrophe, but it is often left out. It's the first day of, or belonging to, the New Year. It is the New Year's first day. Within a generation or two, we will probably never see the apostrophe used for New Year's Day; it will go the way of archaic usage. If current trends are any indication, apostrophe ess will probably shift from indicating the possessive forms of most nouns (its current use) to the general plural form (still considered incorrect currently).
The term "Veterans Day" is spelled without an apostrophe to indicate that the day is a day for honoring all veterans, not just one specific veteran or a possession or attribute belonging to veterans. The absence of the apostrophe sets it apart from possessive forms like "Veteran's Day" or "Veterans' Day."
The apostrophe in "a good day's work" is placed after the word "day" to indicate the possessive form of "day." This construction implies that the work belongs to the day.
Yes, because it is a propernou n. It should be New Year's Day.
It should be Mother's Day.
No, the plural form of "day" is "days" and does not require an apostrophe. An apostrophe is used to show possession or contraction, not to form plurals.
Yes. It does n't need an apostrophe because awards here is used as an adjective describing day.
Yes. It should be St. Patrick's Day.
Yes, "Ladies' Guest Day" should have an apostrophe to indicate possession, as it refers to a day belonging to the ladies. The apostrophe signifies that the guests are associated with the ladies, making it clear that the event is specifically for them. Without the apostrophe, the phrase could be misinterpreted as a day for ladies in general rather than a special occasion for those invited by the ladies.
I believe it should have an apostrophe, but it is often left out. It's the first day of, or belonging to, the New Year. It is the New Year's first day. Within a generation or two, we will probably never see the apostrophe used for New Year's Day; it will go the way of archaic usage. If current trends are any indication, apostrophe ess will probably shift from indicating the possessive forms of most nouns (its current use) to the general plural form (still considered incorrect currently).
The term "Veterans Day" is spelled without an apostrophe to indicate that the day is a day for honoring all veterans, not just one specific veteran or a possession or attribute belonging to veterans. The absence of the apostrophe sets it apart from possessive forms like "Veteran's Day" or "Veterans' Day."
No, there is no apostrophe after the 's' in "Grandparents Day." The term is already possessive with the 's' indicating that the day is dedicated to all grandparents.
Yes. "Valentine's Day" has an apostrophe. You use apostrophes when you state that something belongs to someone or something else.
Grandparents Day, this year, was on Sept. 12, 2010.
christas eve, grandfathers day, good day, my day, us day
The apostrophe in "a good day's work" is placed after the word "day" to indicate the possessive form of "day." This construction implies that the work belongs to the day.