The apostrophe in "rhinoceros" to show possession should go after the "s", making it "rhinoceros'".
If this is someone's name, as I suspect it is, the apostrophe will go as such "Vikas's"
it wouldn't have one unless it had an s, like Ronald's.
The apostrophe needs to go after the s. For Example, if the chips belong to Lars, we could say they are Lars' chips. If they are the property of several girls, they are the girls' chips.
If janitors is simply a plural word, then it doesn't need an apostrophe. Janitor's is a singular possessive (Janitor's responsibilities). Janitors' is the plural possessive (Janitors' responsibilities).
An apostrophe is used after the last letter in a sentence when indicating possession or contraction. For example, "The dog's toy" indicates possession, while "It's a beautiful day" is a contraction for "It is."
The apostrophe in "years" goes before the "s" to show possession, like this: "years'."
If this is someone's name, as I suspect it is, the apostrophe will go as such "Vikas's"
It depends upon the context. Shark's is used to indicate that a shark posesses something. Sharks is used to indicate that there are more than one shark. Sharks' is used to indicate that more than one shark posses something. _______________ It depends, if one shark is showing possession, then it is shark's. For example: the shark's prey swam quickly. If more than one shark shows possession, then it is sharks'. For example: all of the sharks' habitat were in danger. Now if the sharks aren't showing possession, then it doesn't go anywhere. For example: the sharks were in danger.
The apostrophe goes between the r and the s,showing mother's possession of the birthday.Example:"Tomorrow is his mother's birthday."An exception would be if you were talking about two mothers who shared a birthday. Then one might say "Tomorrow is the mothers' birthday," as it is now mothers that possess the birthday.
it wouldn't have one unless it had an s, like Ronald's.
The apostrophe goes before the "s" in "baby's bib" to show possession. This indicates that the bib belongs to the baby.
Yes, you can use an apostrophe s to show possession even if the name ends in Z.
There is no apostrophe. This is because "daughters" is being used as a plural noun, and is not being used to show possession.
A fisherman's ...................................... the apostrophe -s shows possession - the life belongs to the fisherman.
The apostrophe should be placed before the "s" in "lady's" to indicate possession. The corrected sentence is: "The boy knocked on the lady's door." This shows that the door belongs to the lady.
An apostrophe is placed before the "s" to indicate possession for singular nouns (e.g., "the dog's collar"). For plural nouns that already end in "s," the apostrophe is added after the "s" (e.g., "the dogs' park"). For plural nouns that do not end in "s," the apostrophe precedes the "s" (e.g., "the children's toys").
the aposterphe goes after the Sfor example: The two girls' bicyles were stolen.