There are three types of apostrophe. The possessive apostrophe, to show that a letter is missing and to highlight a word or phrase, eg 'hasn't', doesn't', 'can't'. The possessive apostrophe would be used in a sentence such as 'The student's work was of a high standard' meaning the work of the student. However if you are using the word students in the plural form, it would be written 'students' work'.
Use the apostrophe right after the letter s: fighters'
The apostrophe in the word Billy's means Billy's ownership of something.
The word apostrophe forms a normal plural as apostrophes.The possessive forms would be:apostrophe's (singular) - "The apostrophe's use in contractions is fairly standardized."apostrophes' (plural) - "The apostrophes' positions are wrong in some of his words."
You wouldn't need to add an apostrophe because the plural of wolf is wolves
For singular possession, it would be customer's.For plural possession, it would be customers'.An apostrophe would not be placed on its own after the word customer.
No, the word "your" does not require an apostrophe. "Your" is a possessive pronoun, while "you're" is a contraction for "you are" that uses an apostrophe.
An apostrophe is needed: the bosses' profits = the profits of all the bosses the boss's profits = the profits of the boss When the noun is plural, the apostrophe goes at the end of the word. When the noun is singular, the apostrophe goes after the word, before the s. Hope this helps.
No, the word "that" does not require an apostrophe to show possession. The possessive form of "that" is simply "that's."
Yes, the word "grandma" does not have an apostrophe. The possessive form would be "grandma's."
An apostrophe is used in contraction. Example: you will: you'll
Probably not; we would use the word "windscreen's" to make it possessive, as in some object that belonged to the windscreen. "Windscreens" without an apostrophe would mean that you are making the word plural, as in "more than one windscreen".
no.
No, the word "yours" does not use an apostrophe. It is a possessive pronoun that indicates something belongs to you.
There are three types of apostrophe. The possessive apostrophe, to show that a letter is missing and to highlight a word or phrase, eg 'hasn't', doesn't', 'can't'. The possessive apostrophe would be used in a sentence such as 'The student's work was of a high standard' meaning the work of the student. However if you are using the word students in the plural form, it would be written 'students' work'.
Use the apostrophe right after the letter s: fighters'
Use an apostrophe only (without the s) to the word parents if it indicates possession. Example: parents' house