If the word is singular then you put the apostrophe before the s. If it is plural then put it after the s. A word does no have a apostrophe in the possessive if it is a pronoun, example: his or hers.
Apostrophes are punctuation marks used to indicate possession or contraction. For example, "Mary's book" shows possession, while "can't" is a contraction of "cannot." It's important to use apostrophes correctly to avoid confusion in writing.
No, you do not need to use an apostrophe in the sentence "I have two cousins." Apostrophes are typically used to show possession or to indicate missing letters in contractions.
There are a few contractions that would have 2 apostrophes. Some combine the auxiliary verb have and the negative adverb not. Others use a combination of would and have. They are all considered informal, but can be heard in colloquial conversations.'twasn't - it was not (archaic)'tisn't - it is not (archaic)couldn't've - could not havewouldn't've - would not haveshouldn't've - should not havemightn't've - night not havemustn't've - must not haveoughtn't've - ought not haveI'd've - I would havehe'd've - he would haveshe'd've - she would haveit'd've - it would havewe'd've - we would haveyou'd've - you would havethey'd've - they would havewho'd've - who would haveI'll've - I will havehe'll've - he will haveshe'll've - she will havewe'll've - we will haveyou'll've - you will havethey'll've - they will havewho'll've - who will haveA few others are plainly nonstandard:hadn't've (had not have) repeats the verbI'ven't (I have not) and such are basically haven't with an extra apostrophe
The sentence "I am going to the store, to buy some milk and bread, after work." uses commas correctly to separate two clauses in the sentence.
You have it spelled correctly - 'hopped'.
You don't. Apostrophes aren't use to make words plural. The plural of person is people. (One person, two people.) You don't need the apostrophe in apostrophes either.
Inches is shown by two apostrophes (").
Apostrophes are punctuation marks used to indicate possession or contraction. For example, "Mary's book" shows possession, while "can't" is a contraction of "cannot." It's important to use apostrophes correctly to avoid confusion in writing.
Use an apostrophe to signify either a contraction of two words don't = do not or to signify possession cat's tail boys' soccer ball James's son
"Feet" has no apostrophes.
doesn't make sense
One, example 5'2" equals five feet and two inches.
The two types of apostrophes are the straight apostrophe ('), which is used to show possession or contraction, and the curly or typographic apostrophe (’), which is a more visually appealing version of the straight apostrophe.
Apostrophes serve two primary functions: they indicate possession and form contractions. For possession, an apostrophe shows that something belongs to someone, as in "Sarah's book." In contractions, an apostrophe replaces omitted letters, such as in "don't" for "do not."
Look at your keyboard, and you can easy see this different kinds.
Plurals don't use apostrophes, so the first one is correct.
by using two hands and holding it very gently on the bottom and on the arm.