No, the plural form of "day" is "days" and does not require an apostrophe. An apostrophe is used to show possession or contraction, not to form plurals.
The correct form is "The coats belong to the children." There is no need for an apostrophe in this sentence because "children" is a plural noun, not 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.
yes becasue cousins is plural you would do this: cousins'
No you don't! Horses does not need an apostrophe.
If you are referring toward the term "pros and cons" an apostrophe is not used. An apostrophe is used when referring to "professionals", as it is the contracted form of the word.
Dinosaur does not need an apostrophe. The plural form is dinosaurs. The singular possessive form is dinosaur's, as in "the dinosaur's tooth." Plural possessive would be dinosaurs', as in "the dinosaurs' eggs."
As a plural noun, butterflies does not need an apostrophe. Apostrophes are not used to make nouns plural.As a possessive noun, butterflies does needan apostrophe. The plural form is butterflies' (the butterflies' wing). Apostrophes are used to show possession.
The plural "Thursdays" doesn't need an apostrophe.
The correct form is "The coats belong to the children." There is no need for an apostrophe in this sentence because "children" is a plural noun, not possessive.
Series is a noun that has the same form in the singular and the plural. There is no need for an apostrophe, unless it is in the possessive case: series's for the singular possessive and series' for the 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.
When you are talking about the two Robinsons, Megan and Travis, the s serves to indicate that the noun is plural, therefore it does not need an apostrophe. You would only need an apostrophe to indicate the possessive form of the word, as in, that is Mr. Robinson's car.
As a plural, for more than one dad; no, does not need an apostrophe. As a possessive, as in the item belonging to dad, then yes, it does need an apostrophe.
If you wanted to say "nieces" as a plural, such as "I have two nieces", then it wouldn't need an apostrophe. If you wanted to say something like "My niece's teddybear", showing singular possession, then you would need an apostrophe. The word nieces is a plural noun. If you want to use it as a plural possessive noun then put an apostrophe at the end - nieces' My nieces' husbands are both doctors.
If you're talking about something that belongs to the teacher, then you need the apostrophe. Teacher's desk, teacher's computer, etc. If you're talking about teacher as a plural noun, then you don't need the apostrophe.
You wouldn't need to add an apostrophe because the plural of wolf is wolves
No. Most style guides suggest that the apostrophe is not needed to indicate the plural.Other than these erstwhile exceptions, the apostrophe is an indicator of possession, not plurals. Unless there is a need to avoid confusion, you can write the plural of 7 as 7s.