Ladies' dresses 'Ladies' is the plural form of 'lady'. The word changes completely in the plural (ie not 'ladys') so the apostrophe must go after the entire word.
If you are talking about something that belongs to more than one woman the correct use of the apostrophe is ladies' as in "the ladies' clothing department."If you are talking about something that belongs to one woman the spelling is slightly different, although the pronunciation is the same, and you should write lady's, as in "I returned the lady's handkerchief."
They'd.
Well if her name is "Agne" then the apostrophe would go here "Agne's ". However, if her name is "Agnes" then the apostrophe would go here "Agnes' "
Mrs Debase. (no apostrophe) Mrs Debase's handbag. (Possessive apostrophe)
There is no apostrophe in that sentence. It would be in: The scouts' tents.
The apostrophe would go in the name "Ronald" when indicating possession as "Ronald's". For plural possessive, it would be "Ronalds' ".
The contraction for I would is I'd. I'd go see a doctor if I were you.
If it is required, the apostrophe would come after the Z but before the S. "This is Mr. Buzz's stinger!"
there is no apostrophe is yours unless a person's/object's name was "Your" and you are talking about something belonging to Your, in which case it would be Your's
An apostrophe is not required.
The correct placement of an apostrophe in "Vikas" would be "Vika's" to show possession or to indicate something belonging to Vikas.