In general, we use apostrophes to indicate possession or contracted forms.
Possessive forms of nouns
The possessive form of a singular noun is marked by an apostrophe followed by s.
the manager’s report
the lecturer’s hypothesis
This rule applies in most cases even with a name ending in s.
the PTGAS’s response
Erasmus’s success
If a plural noun already ends in s, the apostrophe is used alone.
the students’ work (several students)
the teachers’ room (all the teachers)
Note that the apostrophe is also used in expressions of time.
eight weeks’ time
yesterday’s meeting
Degree types should be written with an apostrophe followed by s.
bachelor’s degree
master’s degree
But note the exception doctoral degree (not doctor’s degree).
Do not use apostrophes to indicate a decade, a plural acronym or the plurals of figures.
the 1990’s
the 1990s
URL’s
URLs
747’s
747s
Contractions
Use apostrophes for contractions (you’re for you are, don’t for do not, it’s for it is or it has) but note that contractions are far less common in formal texts than they are in informal writing.
«Apostrophes» [en línia]. A: Llibre d’estil de la Universitat de Barcelona. Barcelona: Universitat de Barcelona. Serveis Lingüístics. <https://www.ub.edu/llibre-estil/criteri.php?id=2312> [consulta: 21 novembre 2024].