The correct posesive of womens is women's. When used in the beginnng of a sentence it would be capitalized.
The apostrophe is part of the plural possessive noun so it goes first and the comma merely denotes a pause between words.
The correct way to write "1950s" is without an apostrophe. It is a plural form, not a possessive, so there is no need for punctuation. Make sure to include the "s" at the end to indicate that it is a decade.
"Mlle" is correct. No further punctuation is necessary.
The correct punctuation for "The holidays, in my opinion, are depressing."
The correct punctuation change is: "The composer had a preponderance."
The correct possessive form of the plural noun women is women's.Example: The women's lingerie department is on the second level.
The grammatically correct form is women's rights.It is always written in the possessive form as it refers to the rights of women.
That is the correct spelling of "apostrophe" (the punctuation mark ' ).
The apostrophe is part of the plural possessive noun so it goes first and the comma merely denotes a pause between words.
No, women's is a plural possessive.
The correct way to write "1950s" is without an apostrophe. It is a plural form, not a possessive, so there is no need for punctuation. Make sure to include the "s" at the end to indicate that it is a decade.
The apostrophe is used to show that a noun is possessive.
Neither is correct, a possessive noun (singular or plural) requires an apostrophe (') to show possession.The possessive form of the singular noun 'woman' is woman's.The correct term is woman's club (a golf club, perhaps, belonging to a woman).The possessive form of the plural noun women is women's.The correct term is women's club (an organization of a number of women).
"Mlle" is correct. No further punctuation is necessary.
The correct punctuation for "The holidays, in my opinion, are depressing."
The correct punctuation change is: "The composer had a preponderance."
The correct punctuation for "Sam is scared" is a period (Sam is scared.).