The word sisters is a common plural noun. It needs no apostrophe.I loved my sisters.
When sisters have possessions or belongings, it needs an apostrophe.
I loved my sisters' letters and cards.
My sisters' husbands were teachers.
For all plural nouns ending in "s", place the apostrophe at the end of the word but do not add another "s".So, for example, for "sisters", you would write:My sisters' house is enormous.meaningThe house belonging to my sisters is enormous.
The apostrophe in "they'd" stands for the missing letters in "they would" or "they had."
Sisters-in-law is a plural noun referring to more than one sister-in-law.The possessive form of this plural noun is sisters-in-law's.
It would be he'd. He'll is wrong because that is the apostrophe for he will.
My sisters' cat is brown and orange.putting an apostrophe after the S makes the word sisters possessive.
It should be: during your sister's passing
For all plural nouns ending in "s", place the apostrophe at the end of the word but do not add another "s".So, for example, for "sisters", you would write:My sisters' house is enormous.meaningThe house belonging to my sisters is enormous.
The order would be: sisters sister's sisters'In a directory, the alphabetical order would be determined by any other words following, ignoring the apostrophes. Lacking any further entry, the three are the same.Directory example (apostrophes are ignored):Sisters' RestaurantSister's SewingSisters TavernWord processors (word sort) use a different logic. The non-apostrophe version comes first, followed in order of the occurrence of the apostrophe. Based on just the words themselves, the order would besisterssister'ssisters'
if the sister is only one, it should be: your sister's schoolif the sisters are more than one, it should be: your sisters' school
The apostrophe in "they'd" stands for the missing letters in "they would" or "they had."
there is no apostrophe
Sisters-in-law is a plural noun referring to more than one sister-in-law.The possessive form of this plural noun is sisters-in-law's.
It would be he'd. He'll is wrong because that is the apostrophe for he will.
We would. Apostrophe=woul[d]
My sisters' cat is brown and orange.putting an apostrophe after the S makes the word sisters possessive.
I shall with an apostrophe is I'll, same as I will.
The contraction or "you would" is you'd. It is also the contraction for the phrase "you had." In either case, the apostrophe goes where the letters were removed.