You would use years' when talking about more than one year in a possessive sense We agreed to review our agreement in five years' time. 1½ is not yet 2 or more, so which do we properly say 1½ years old or 1½ year old? Maybe this is a dumb question If i was writing the sentence following years worth of research., would it be correct to write years worth or years' worth
My initial instinct was years worth, but ms word's autocorrect is flagging that as incorrect. Meaning 50% of my stock purchases happened in 2020 and the other 50% in 2021 Anything purchased before or in march 2020 during covid is slightly up despite the most recent tech stock downturn but i'm seeing massive red. I'm working on my resume and microsoft word keeps flagging this sentence I have two years experience in etc. according to word it should be either years' or year's What are your guy's thoughts?
No 750 year old rivers for me The longer lived races each adulthood much slower as well. So two weeks notice and two years experience are acceptable, however in the singular, the apostrophe is still required One year's experience, or one week's notice Most my friends from hs went straight to university and graduated in 4 years or less (one friend graduated a semester early), while i went to community college and spent 3 years there, transferred, and did my last 2 years at uni I feel like graduating in 4 years is hard too, at least for me, like have had 3 semesters where i took 6 classes and most the time i take 5
So idk how people are. What do embalmed bodies look like several years after being buried Does the embalming preserve them in any way for long periods of time, or is the embalming process only meant to temporarily slow decay long enough for the funeral/visitation I had a friend pass away about 6 years ago and a few more within the last year or two.
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