The correct grammar between 'an 8 year old' or an '8 years old child' is 'an 8 year old child'.
years or year's
4 years
The correct abbreviation is LY.- A kilo light-year is KLY.(1,000 light-years).- A mega light-year MLY.(1 million light-years).- A giga light-year is GLY.(1 billion light-years).
The correct form is, "this year's play".
The correct way is to write New Year's Eve.
All of a child that is 12 years old will be 12 years old.
The correct phrasing would be "B years' experience," indicating that the experience spans multiple years.
34 * * * * * Not 34 years! The correct answer is 24 years.
Both are correct depending upon the interpretation. If you are referring to the collective years, than the first example is correct. If you are referring to a specific year, then the second, possessive example, is correct.
My child is 5 years old. Or he is a 5-year-old child.
Assuming the budget only covers one year, it's "last year's budget".
No. The "years" in that instance is simply the plural of year. The "year" does not poses anything.