might've
As you've written it, there's no apostrophe and is not meant o be one. But you might be asking what is the contracted form of you will, in which case the answer is you'll.
No. A spider is a spider and an apostrophe is an apostrophe.
An apostrophe signifies possession - the thing belongs to the person pr people named So If my mother has a car then - my mother's car = my mom's car If my mother is a member of a committee made up of other mothers, then the committee she is on might be "The Moms' Committee" For one mother - the apostrophe goes before the s, for a group of mothers the apostrophe goes after the s.
No, your doesn't have an apostrophe. You're, however, does have an apostrophe because it's a contraction for you and are.
You can write "might have" in a contraction form with an apostrophe as "might've."
might've
As you've written it, there's no apostrophe and is not meant o be one. But you might be asking what is the contracted form of you will, in which case the answer is you'll.
Final apostrophe is only used in the case of plurals ending in s. Otherwise apostrophe plus s is required. Thus we might say we listened to Tom Jones's records at the Joneses' house.
No. A spider is a spider and an apostrophe is an apostrophe.
An apostrophe signifies possession - the thing belongs to the person pr people named So If my mother has a car then - my mother's car = my mom's car If my mother is a member of a committee made up of other mothers, then the committee she is on might be "The Moms' Committee" For one mother - the apostrophe goes before the s, for a group of mothers the apostrophe goes after the s.
you've is the apostrophe of you have
The apostrophe for "they had" is "they'd".
No, your doesn't have an apostrophe. You're, however, does have an apostrophe because it's a contraction for you and are.
An apostrophe. Grammatically, "Founder's Day" means "the day of the (singular) founder", while "Founders Day" ... kind of doesn't mean anything. If there was an apostrophe after the S, it would mean "the day of the (multiple) founders." As is, it might mean that, it might be a typo, it might be a day dedicated to someone named Founders, it might mean the day that, historically, something foundered.
To show possession or omitted letters.Horses is a plural word. Horse's is a possessive.I'll is a contraction of "I" and "will", the apostrophe shows that one or more letters have been omitted. Ill is how one might feel when stricken with the stomach bug.
This is an apostrophe.( ' )