the aposterphe goes after the S
for example: The two girls' bicyles were stolen.
The correct sentence with the apostrophe placed is: "The two girls' bicycles were stolen." The apostrophe goes after the word "girls" to indicate possession by the girls.
Those boys' bicycles were stolen outside the store.
Stolen by Gypsies or Beer and Bicycles - 1933 was released on: USA: 14 July 1933
Yes. John thought Sandy had stolen Bob's gloves. (the apostrophe shows that Bob owned the gloves)
Examples: This is my mother's beautiful dress. Ann's watch was stolen yesterday.
If your car is stolen, you should notify the police.
When it is a possessive, use apostrophe. The waitress's coat was stolen. The waitresses' paychecks were cut.
The two primary reasons to use an apostrophe are within:contractionspossessivesI can't believe John's collection was stolen.
When you combine two words in one shortened word (a contraction), use an apostrophe for the missing letter or letters. "Do not" becomes "don't". "You have" becomes "you've". An apostrophe also forms most possessive forms of nouns. Examples: "We're going to town." "Can't we go any faster?" "Sally's car broke down." "The nun's car was stolen shortly thereafter."
they have robbed my house and stolen my new watch
All of the engineers' overalls were stolen from the locker room.
Anything that can be easily removed, quick-release wheels, seat posts and saddles, lights, saddle bags, cyclocomputers.
"Meanwhile, the dog has off and stolen and stolen the meat!" "Meanwhile, as Jenny and Lucas were at the park..."