In between the things you are talking about.
EX:I like bicycles, kites, and ice skates.
If you're talking about more than one employee, then don't use an apostrophe. Plural words should never have an apostrophe. If you're talking about something that belongs to a single employee (such as "the employee's computer") then you need an apostrophe.
I would say the apostrophe goes after the s in girls (Girls' Basketball Team). It is talking about a team that belongs to more than one girl.
Not if you're talking about more than one monkey. You use an apostrophe to make a noun possessive. The monkey's behavior is odd, for example.
There is no apostrophe if you are talking about more than one CD which is not possessive.e.g. The shop sold CDs.However, if you were talking about a CD which owned/possessed something, there would be an apostrophe.e.g. The CD's first song was my favourite.
That depends on what you want to say. If you are talking about humans in the plural form, as in These are humans' caves, the apostrophe is placed after the s. If you are talking about one human, as in This is a human's cave, then the apostrophe is placed before the s. If you just want to refer to more than one human, as in This cave belongs to humans, then there will be no apostrophe.
yes. when there is more than one object
If we are talking about more than one brand, then that's a plural and plurals do not take an apostrophe. e.g. "Their product was as good as - if not better than - most of the top high street brands, yet cost half the price"
It depends on how you are using the word. If you are talking about wings, meaning more than one wing, then there is no apostrophe. Most words are made plural simply by adding the letter s. Using the apostrophe is a possessive form, or it can be a contraction.Apple. One apple.Apples. More than one apple.John's briefcase. The briefcase that belongs to or is possessed by John.He's coming for his briefcase tomorrow. He's is a contraction of He is.
If it's sister's, it only applys to one person eg-her sister's comingif it has an apostrophe after the s(sisters') it means that it applies to more than one thing or object eg- the horses' tails were all long (talking about more then one horse)
No
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."
Only if it is a plural possessive. For example: The Jones' house. In this example, the apostrophe is after the 's' because there is more than one Jones family member living in the house. This is a plural possessive. If you are only talking about one person then the apostrophe is after the name followed by an 's'. For example: Mike's book.