noun
- a punctuation mark (‘) used to show possession or to indicate missing letters in contractions
- a literary device in which a speaker addresses someone absent, dead, or inanimate as if present and able to respond
Usage: grammar
Usage: literary; rhetoric
Examples
- Don’t forget the apostrophe in “can’t” and “won’t.”
- The apostrophe in “Sarah’s book” shows that the book belongs to Sarah.
- Many people confuse “its” and “it’s” because of the apostrophe.
- In the poem, the speaker uses apostrophe to address the wind directly.
- “O Death, where is thy sting?” is an example of apostrophe in literature.
- The apostrophe makes “we’re” a contraction of “we are.”
- Students often misplace the apostrophe in plural possessives like “the dogs’ toys.”