It would be Dr's order, but I would spell out the word. "Doctor's order".
No apostrophe needed in the sentence "The turkey has two ears."
The correct sentence should be: "The women's coats are here." In this case, the apostrophe goes before the "s" to show that the coats belong to the women.
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.
If it is a single house, then the sentence is incorrect. If house is singular, the apostrophe should go before the s, with the sentence reading "The house's furniture was simple." The way the sentence reads now, it suggests plural houses.
The teenager's mother was so possessive of her that she never let her go out with her friends on the weekends."A possessive apostrophe shows ownership of an object"Possessive means to own so the president's birthday has a possessive apostrophe before the s as it is the president's birthday day. (u can use the first sentence or make up your own.
There is no apostrophe in that sentence. It would be in: The scouts' tents.
The men's uniform.
No apostrophe needed in the sentence "The turkey has two ears."
The correct way to write the sentence is: "The students' books are on his desk." The apostrophe is placed after the "s" in "students" to show that the books belong to the students.
You listen to your children's opinions.
The correct sentence should be: "The women's coats are here." In this case, the apostrophe goes before the "s" to show that the coats belong to the women.
Parents'......the apostrophe goes at the end of Parents because it is Plural Possessive.
You don't need an apostrophe in that sentence. Studentsis a plural word, not a possessive.
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 apostrophe is not needed because deer is a singular and plural word. The sentence should read 'These deer antlers all have eight points.'
Samantha borrowed Julie's pencil.
the aposterphe goes after the Sfor example: The two girls' bicyles were stolen.