Okay. I hope I'm right with this
1.) Princes is showing ownership so it's princes' rescues is rescue's and dragons is dragon's
2.) Chocolates would be Chocolate's, and again, ownership, mothers is mothers'
3.) You don't put an apostrophe in takes because you don't put apostrophes in verbs. There is no apostrophe in minutes because it's telling how many minutes it takes to get somewhere. Of course in a sentence like, "Let's have a minute's talk," you would place an apostrophe but not in this case. (Not sure about this answer) And suns you would put an apostrophe after the s because it is again showing ownership.
4.) Don't put an apostrophe in lilacs or curtains because grammar rules are weird. But you do put an apostrophe after the s in rooms because it's the rooms charm. The room owns that charm and it's talking about just one room.
Hope this helps. I don't know if everything I've said is right but I've done my best.
A groundling was a person who visited the globe theatre in the early 17th century. They were to poor to pay to be able to sit on one of the three levels of the theatre .
Answer:
after students, judges, ones, parents, womens, jims, and weeks
Explanation:
Answer and Explanation:
Have you ever being in a situation where you tried to do something you always excelled in previously but all of a sudden you just flopped?
This was my story on this day. As a child I was a pretty good dancer and everyone around loved watching me dance. Well, I was till my friends in high school made me enter into a dancing competition.
The music was good, the crowd was friendly to an extent but when I got to the stage all I could do was to sway from side to side. My friends kept on cheering me on. But I couldn't just help it. I eventually stopped trying when one of the judges asked me to get off the stage, that I had no business coming for the contest.
I felt like I had wasted everybody's time so while walking out of the building I had my eyes on the flow with my head bowed. I had never felt so embarrassed in my life.
Where is the passage that belongs with this