Are you talking about the possessive form, as in something that belongs to a taco (such as the taco's meat), or did you think, for some unknown reason, that there might be an apostrophe in some plurals (that aren't also made possessive at the same time)?
If you thought that an apostrophe belongs in a standard plural, then why and where did you get that idea? Why and where does anyone, not just you, get an idea that a nonpossive plural would have an apostrophe?
There is no apostrophe for plural of "taco," as in "They're selling tacos here." Use an apostrophe for the possessive form, though, as in "The taco's meat is good," or to show a contraction of "taco is," as in "This taco's great!"
An apostrophe is placed to replace missing letters in contractions. For example, "you are" becomes "you're" with the apostrophe representing the missing "a". It is important to understand the full words being contracted to correctly place the apostrophe.
No, you do not need to put an apostrophe in the word "hundreds" unless you are indicating a contraction or possession.
Yes, you would put an apostrophe after the z when making it possessive. For example, "The dog's leash" would be correct.
The apostrophe in "children" would be placed before the "s" to show possession: children's.
The apostrophe in "cyclist" would be placed before the last letter when indicating possession: cyclist's.
Aren't- The apostrophe replaces the 'o' in this circumstance.
daren'tAs a rule of thumb, the apostrophe replaces one or more missing characters (in this case, the O of NOT)
The apostrophe is placed before the "s" in "school's" to indicate possession. For example, "the school's football team."
In contraction of words, the apostrophe is always placed at the spot where the letter(s) has been removed. In this case, at the place of the second o. do not: don't
you can drink tacos if you put them in a blender
The word o'clock is is a contraction, reduced from "of the clock."
The apostrophe indicates where letters have been removed from the original words to make the contraction. So, if you change "do not" into "don't", you have removed the O between the n and the T, so you put the apostrophe in to indicate the missing letter. You only put one apostrophe even if more than one letter has been removed.
after the t (it's) You put an apostrophe on 'its' if it's a contraction of "it is." Otherwise, 'its' has no apostrophe because that's its nature.
Put the apostrophe in mices right after s.: mices'
No apostrophe is to be putted in this sentence.
Personally, no. But it's not incorrect to put the apostrophe.
"Volkswagen" doesn't require an apostrophe.