The apostrophe in nor'wester indicates that some letters have been omitted.
The full or unabbreviated word is northwester.
The contractionI'dcan mean either "I would" or "I had."
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.)
An apostrophe is a punctuation mark used to indicate possession or to show where letters have been omitted in contractions. It is also used in some plural forms of numbers and letters.
The apostrophe for "they had" is "they'd".
The sign for an apostrophe is '. It is used to indicate possession or contraction in written language.
Did you mean "Does believes have an apostrophe?" No, it doesn't.
The word there's is a contraction for there is. The apostrophe substitutes for the i in is.
You mean an apostrophe used in a contraction.I did not like him.I didn't like him.
The word "its" does not require an apostrophe when indicating possession, as in "The dog chased its tail." However, "it's" with an apostrophe is a contraction for "it is" or "it has," as in "It's going to rain today." To determine whether to use the apostrophe, consider whether you mean possession (no apostrophe) or a contraction (with apostrophe).
apostrophe '
If you mean as an abbreviation of 'old', then the apostrophe would be at the end of the word (ol'), because the apostrophe shows that the 'd' at the end of the word has been omitted.
The contractionI'dcan mean either "I would" or "I had."
danza (without the apostrophe) = dance
you dont use apostrophe's in Arabic. (i study Arabic in school)
NO, if you typed "viruses'" (viruses with an apostrophe) it would mean "The viruses' (more than one virus's) something.
You mean the apostrophe?
I think you mean a contraction of you would, it is you'd.