There is no apostrophe as 1970s is a plural.
An apostrophe would only be used (1970's) to indicate possession or a contraction.
The punctuation mark that shows possession is the apostrophe, either placed and the end of a word followed by an 's', or if the word ends in an 's', following that 's'.
The hyphen is both an element and a punctuation mark.As punctuation, the hyphen is used to join adjectives that modify a noun: fast-talking girlit is used to separate the elements of a spelled word: s-c-i-o-nYou will see it used in place of a comma - but I don't like it.
The punctuation to show possession is an apostrophe.Singular possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe s to the end of a noun.For plural nouns that end in -s, the possessive are formed by adding an apostrophe after the existing -s; for irregular plural nouns that don't end with -s, the possessive is formed by adding the apostrophe s, the same as a singular noun.
cruditéé is called é accent aigü in french, or e acute in englishI think you're meaning the little sign above the e, it's called accent in frenchOther examples of punctuation are è, ê, ù, ô, â, à, all are called accent (more precisely accent grave, accent circonflexe)The sign ¨ on ë or ü or ï is called trémaThese are all the sign you'll find on letter in frenchThere's a sign under letter: under c, the sign ç, called cédille to keep the sound s.Apercevoir -> Aperçu, this way the sound s is kept.
The apostrophe and letter "s" at the end of the word indicate possession by a single noun, the candidate. "Candidate" without the apostrophe or "s" is a single noun; if the "s" were included, but there was no apostrophe ("candidates"), the word would be a plural noun meaning more than one candidate. If the apostrophe were to follow the "s" ("candidates' "), it would mean that multiple candidates possess something.
The punctuation mark that shows possession is the apostrophe, either placed and the end of a word followed by an 's', or if the word ends in an 's', following that 's'.
It stands for 'Under Saddle'
apos;s in the actual word, but the asker couldn't do the ; because the question mark is the only punctuation mark allowed in a question in this site. I'm sorry but I have the same question as the asker here, so I cant tell you what it means. But I improved the answer so the asker would know.
1300's
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Mario Risso has written: 'Safari Punctuation' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Punctuation, English language
Socialist. All the rubbish that the students came up with in the 60's became the law of the land in the 70's.
Lynn M. Alperin has written: 'Punctuation for clarity and style' -- subject(s): Medical writing, Punctuation