Yes, the sentence should have an apostrophe to denote possession. It should be written as: "Linda and her vice presidents' are going to Brazil."
No, the first letter of a sentence should not be capitalized if an apostrophe precedes it. The apostrophe indicates a contraction or possession and does not affect the capitalization rules for sentences.
The correct sentence should be: "The women's coats are here." In this case, the apostrophe goes before the "s" to show that the coats belong to the women.
Not in that sentence. If you mean "something belonging to the governor", then it should have an apostrophe. If you mean "more than one governor" then it should not. (If you mean something belonging to more than one governor, then it should have one, but it should be after the s instead of before it.)
The apostrophe should go before the "s" in "Drs" to show that it is a contraction for "doctor's." The correct sentence is: "That was the Dr.'s order."
The word "its" does not require an apostrophe when used as a possessive pronoun. Only use "its' " when it is a contraction for "it is" or "it has," and never as a possessive form.
No, the first letter of a sentence should not be capitalized if an apostrophe precedes it. The apostrophe indicates a contraction or possession and does not affect the capitalization rules for sentences.
Yes. 'Its' in that sentence is short for 'it is' so it should have an apostrophe.
There is no apostrophe in that sentence. It would be in: The scouts' tents.
Yes there should be an apostrophe. Tomorrow's answers today.
The correct sentence should be: "The women's coats are here." In this case, the apostrophe goes before the "s" to show that the coats belong to the women.
The sentence should be: Don't write in Guss' diary.
There is an apostrophe because it is more than one president we are celebrating for. edit: Nope... not it. More than one president does not necessitate an apostrophe. Would you say "the dog's ran by?" Maybe you would. It is the day of the presidents. The presidents possess the day, like Bill's sock, or Frank's car. But when you think about it, it should be Presidents' Day, since there is more than one president involved... vs. President's Day, which implies one president... hmmmm... mind boggling.
Yes. Alfie's hand should be used.
The apostrophe is not needed because deer is a singular and plural word. The sentence should read 'These deer antlers all have eight points.'
Bushfires shouldn't have an apostrophe.
No. It should be Neil Armstrong's footprint.
The correct sentence with the apostrophe placed is: "The two girls' bicycles were stolen." The apostrophe goes after the word "girls" to indicate possession by the girls.