In abbreviations (where every letter is capitalized), use an apostrophe to indicate that the "s" is not part of the abbreviation.
Yes, that is correct. Program belongs to year.
you dont use an apostrophe in will not
A contraction is made of two words with an apostrophe. Note the apostrophe replaces a letter.
"Each of the boys' are writing a different story."The first mistake is to say "Each are." If you're talking about each one, the correct verb is "Each is writing."The second is to try to use an apostrophe to make a plural. The apostrophe indicates possession, not plural. The correct sentence would be "Each of the boys is writing a different story."
Only if it is the plural possessive, for example The Johnsons' house is blue.
True
No, Korean language does not use apostrophes in its writing system.
In abbreviations (where every letter is capitalized), use an apostrophe to indicate that the "s" is not part of the abbreviation.
Yes, that is correct. Program belongs to year.
you dont use an apostrophe in will not
you do not use an apostrophe in cultures.
Yes, an apostrophe is a punctuation mark used to indicate either possession or contraction in writing.
A contraction is made of two words with an apostrophe. Note the apostrophe replaces a letter.
Yes, it is correct to use an apostrophe when referring to God in the possessive form, such as "God's love" or "God's will." This shows that something belongs to God.
"Each of the boys' are writing a different story."The first mistake is to say "Each are." If you're talking about each one, the correct verb is "Each is writing."The second is to try to use an apostrophe to make a plural. The apostrophe indicates possession, not plural. The correct sentence would be "Each of the boys is writing a different story."
It does not matter if there is a space or whether the letters are connected. However, what does matter is whether the apostrophe is there or not, although the meaning is usually obvious from the context.Contractions such as can't use the apostrophe to indicate missing letters, and the word cant means something different. Except for its, apostrophe S can indicate a possessive (the dog's bone) or a contraction for is or has (the dog's had puppies, or the mayor's back in town).