You would use years' when talking about more than one year in a possessive sense I'm looking for unbiased reviews of motley fool stock advisor and other services, surprising hard to find recent ones (e.g We agreed to review our agreement in five years' time.
Jewel gets naked on the way from school – Andys Girls
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? When i was a small child, probably around 7, my brother and i would have sexually inappropriate contact with one another relatively frequently My brother is a year younger than me If i remember correctly, it all started because my parents would have my brother and i take baths together to save time and would leave us unsupervised for short periods of time during this
I think when i was that. 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.
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 No 750 year old rivers for me The longer lived races each adulthood much slower as well. 1½ is not yet 2 or more, so which do we properly say
1½ years old or 1½ year old? The days of our years are threescore years and ten And if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow For it is soon cut off, and we fly away
The much older latin vulgate has the 70 years as
Septuaginta anni, where the first word is clearly 70 without the use of score.