Tuesday has an apostrophe when it is used in a contraction, such as "Tuesdays are" becoming "Tuesday's."
If showing a day's possession, yes. (e.g. Tuesday's child) If pluralizing a day of the week, no. (e.g. two Mondays)
The apostrophe for "they had" is "they'd".
The apostrophe in "they'd" stands for the missing letters in "they would" or "they had."
The sign for an apostrophe is '. It is used to indicate possession or contraction in written language.
No, hers is already a possessive pronoun. No apostrophe is needed.
The plural is Tuesdays. No apostrophe.
If it's possessing something, then yes. "Tuesday's weather was fantastic!" I suppose you could write "I go to the gym on Tuesdays.", but it would be better to write "I go to the gym every Tuesday."
If showing a day's possession, yes. (e.g. Tuesday's child) If pluralizing a day of the week, no. (e.g. two Mondays)
Mothers is more than one mother. Mother's is something that belongs to a mother. "The mothers group is meeting Tuesday." "My mother's car is in the shop."
When it's showing something that Monday is possessing. Monday's weather was fantastic, for example.
No. A spider is a spider and an apostrophe is an apostrophe.
you've is the apostrophe of you have
The apostrophe for "they had" is "they'd".
No, your doesn't have an apostrophe. You're, however, does have an apostrophe because it's a contraction for you and are.
This is an apostrophe.( ' )
No, taste doesn't have an apostrophe.
Can't is cannot with an apostrophe.