The apostrophe in "a good day's work" is placed after the word "day" to indicate the possessive form of "day." This construction implies that the work belongs to the day.
To make the plural noun "days" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: days'
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 noun days is the plural form of the singular noun day.The possessive form of the singular noun is day's (a day's work).The possessive form of the plural noun is days' (two days' work).
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".
To make the plural noun "days" a possessive, you simply add an apostrophe after the s: days'
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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 word day is a common singular noun. It requires no apostrophe.I started my day with a shower.If the word day has a possession or belonging, it needs an apostrophe.The day's work had just begun.Note: Plural possessive is days' with apostrophe s.
It depends on how long you work out for!
There are three types of apostrophe. The possessive apostrophe, to show that a letter is missing and to highlight a word or phrase, eg 'hasn't', doesn't', 'can't'. The possessive apostrophe would be used in a sentence such as 'The student's work was of a high standard' meaning the work of the student. However if you are using the word students in the plural form, it would be written 'students' work'.
The noun days is the plural form of the singular noun day.The possessive form of the singular noun is day's (a day's work).The possessive form of the plural noun is days' (two days' work).
If showing a day's possession, yes. (e.g. Tuesday's child) If pluralizing a day of the week, no. (e.g. two Mondays)
Yes, the sentence does need an apostrophe. The correct sentence should be: "It took several hours' hard work to repair the damage." The apostrophe is used to show possession or ownership by indicating that the hard work belongs to the hours.
Yes. A good night's sleep is written correctly.
There is no need to use an apostrophe in June unless you are referring to a possessive case, such as "June's days are shorter in Australia than they are in the USA because it is winter in the Southern Hemisphere."
No. A spider is a spider and an apostrophe is an apostrophe.