Yes! =)
An apostrophe is used in a proper name to show possession. Leah's dress, David's voice, and Justin's hair, for example.
The apostrophe denotes ownership Pandora is a proper name and in this context she owns the box.
Only if the title is a proper name, that is, if Carolina Girl is the name of a group. Then you must use the apostrophe to show possession. If the name of the group is Carolina Girls, then no apostrophe is necessary.
No. "Author" isn't a proper noun; it's a thing, like "person" or "employee." Mark Twain would be capitalized, because his name would be considered a "proper noun," like "Earth" versus "planet."
It is non-Hodgkin with a capital on the proper name. The apostrophe-s is optional, and many people do not use it any more.
Yes if a possession and name of the person are in the same sentence
When a proper noun ends in 's,' it is proper most times to place the apostrophe after the 's' and not add another.
There are two accepted forms for possessive singular nouns ending in s:Add an apostrophe (') after the existing s at the end of the word: Marites'Add an apostrophe s ('s) after the existing s at the end of the word: Marites'sExamples:Marites' brother helped her with her homework.Marites's brother helped her with her homework.Note: The name of a person is a proper noun. A proper noun is always capitalized.
there is no apostrophe is yours unless a person's/object's name was "Your" and you are talking about something belonging to Your, in which case it would be Your's
A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A proper noun is the name of a person, a place, or a thing.A possessive noun is a noun that indicates ownership, possession, origin, or purpose of another noun in a sentence.Examples:Jack is my brother. (the noun Jack is a proper noun, the name of a person)Jack's bicycle is new. (the noun Jack's is a possessive noun, indicated by the apostrophe s; the noun bicycle is the thing possessed)The bicycle's color is blue. (the noun bicycle's is a possessive noun, indicated by the apostrophe s; the noun color is the thing possessed)
Kris is a person's name, a person's name is a proper noun.
Fritzes is the plural form. Fritz's is the possessive form. Ex: The Fritzes live next door. The Fritz's dog Molly ran away.