0
Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Vocabulary

the symbol

HI, instead of putting the symbol (‘) after enemies’, shall I say as enemie’s for the below summary. Thank you

While Korea is occupied by the Japanese Army in 1933, the resistance plans to kill the Japanese Commander. But their plan is threatened by a traitor within their group and also the enemies’ forces are hunting them down.
  

Top answer

Probably you are referring to the forces of a single enemy, in which case write enemy's . If you mean forces of more than one enemy, it would be enemies' . enemie's is always wrong.

  • Probably you are referring to the forces of a single enemy, in which case write enemy's .
  • If you mean forces of more than one enemy, it would be enemies' .
  • enemie's is always wrong.
  • The symbol that you refer to is called an apostrophe.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
Probably you are referring to the forces of a single enemy, in which case write enemy's. If you mean forces of more than one enemy, it would be enemies'. enemie's is always wrong.

The symbol that you refer to is called an apostrophe.
0
Simple and clear. This is really helpful, thanks GPY.

Related Questions