The 1940s should not have an apostrophe when referring to the decade as a whole, as it is a plural noun that does not possess anything. It is simply a way to denote the years from 1940 to 1949. However, if you were to indicate a specific year within that decade, such as "the '40s," the apostrophe is used to denote the omission of the first two digits (19).
The correct form is "1970s" without an apostrophe. The apostrophe is not needed because the term refers to the decade as a plural noun rather than indicating possession. So, you should write "the 1970s."
Yes, if it means a possession of 1940. Example: 1940's music
The U.S. didn't mint any silver dollars in the 1940s.
Buzzy
Pansy
it's is a abbreviation of it is so it should have an apostrophe
no There should never be an apostrophe in "never".
It should not have an apostrophe.
No. Harringtons doesn't need an apostrophe.
Should not = shouldn't
Yes, the sentence should have an apostrophe to denote possession. It should be written as: "Linda and her vice presidents' are going to Brazil."
No there shouldn't be an apostrophe.
No, Morrisons should not have an apostrophe in its name. It is a plural possessive noun.
The apostrophe indicates possession. So, no apostrophe.
The apostrophe in "its" should not be placed after the s. "Its" is a possessive pronoun and does not require an apostrophe to show possession.
One should never use an apostrophe for the word that.One should always use an apostrophe for the word that's, meaning that is.
'Life's gift' should indeed have an apostrophe, as the gift is belonging to life (possessive pronoun), as it were.