Grammar Tips and Tricks: The Correct Usage of Apostrophes

You don’t think this is right?
No.
It is your possession.
Okay, guess what?
It’s either.
You can use either. You look surprised.
Okay, next one.
Bosses day or Bosses day. Which one?
The second one. Bosses day. Huh?
It could be either or. Bosses day.
No, that was not either or.
It’s only one. It’s the.
Which one? Bosses day.
Which one? The first or second?
Second. Second.
You say you think it’s the second one?
Yeah, the second one.
Okay, so that’s right.
And we said both of these.
Now, last one,
for goodness sake. Without an apostrophe.
Or goodness sake, with an apostrophe.
Without an apostrophe.
Without an apostrophe. You.
You think that’s the answer?
Okay, I’m so sorry,
but you’re wrong. What?
Oh, man, yes.
Whose sake is it? It’s goodness sake.
Because you could say for your sake.
And who would the sake be?
Your sake. You would say,
for my sake. Whose sake would it be?
My sake. Whose sake?
It is goodness sake. So I told you I was right.
Okay, he got it right.
So let me ask you something.
Did you learn something new?
Yeah, I want to know what you Learned new.
That I’m right and they’re wrong.
Haha, I like that.
But I need something else.
What else did you learn new anyway?
Yes, ma’am.
You put it, uh,
at the end. Here’s the key.
If it’s an apostrophe, you have to have a noun after it.
You have To have a noun after it.
Okay.
Understand