ApostropheThe apostrophe (Ↄ, ↄ, ’), also known as the apostrophus, is a punctuation mark used in writing. It is also a diacritic. In English, it has two jobs:[1]
ExamplesIts versus it'sThe most common grammatical mistake in written English is to put it's where its is correct. Its: a possessive adjective and pronoun of the personal pronoun it.
It's: a contraction of the verbal phrase it is or it has.
The same applies to yours, theirs and ours because these are also possessive adjectives of personal pronouns.
PossessionApostrophes are also used to show something belongs to someone (or something). Again, correct uses can be expanded:
The intrusive apostropheComes in plurals which don't (do not) need it. Do not put an apostrophe in word ending in s, such as a plural. Put an apostrophe, or 's, at the end of the word instead.
Writing dialogue or titlesApostrophes are also used when other words are shortened, as in slang:
This is just a version of the abbreviation function. PluralTo make a word that doesn't (does not) usually exist as a plural into a plural, an apostrophe is occasionally used. See these examples:
References
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