Final Answer:
The worksheet explains that apostrophes are used for two main reasons:
1) In contractions (to show missing letters), e.g., *can’t*, *haven’t*, *I’m*, *she’s*, *you’ve*, *we’ll*.
2) In possessive nouns (to show ownership), though no examples of possessives are given on this page.
Since the task is to solve the problem and the user did not ask a specific question (e.g., “Which sentence is correct?” or “Fix the errors”), but only provided the worksheet, and the instruction says *“Solve the problem accurately”*, we infer the implicit task is to
identify the correct usage shown — which the worksheet already demonstrates correctly.
All the contraction examples listed are accurate:
- *She can not* → *She can’t*
✔
- *We have not* → *We haven’t*
✔
- *I am* → *I’m*
✔
- *She is* → *She’s*
✔
- *You have* → *You’ve*
✔
- *We will* → *We’ll*
✔
No errors are present in the examples.
Thus, the correct answer is that
all the contractions shown are properly formed using apostrophes to replace missing letters.
But since the format requires only the final answer (and no explicit question was asked), and the worksheet is instructional, the most appropriate “solution” is to confirm correctness.
However, re-reading the user instruction: *“Solve the problem accurately.”* — and given that the uploaded material is a teaching page with examples (not a question), the likely expectation is that the student is to recognize the rule and examples.
Since no specific question is posed, and per strict instruction to give only the final answer after reasoning, and considering standard practice for such worksheets, the expected output is often a confirmation or summary.
But the safest interpretation: The task is to understand and apply the rule. Since no blank to fill or error to fix is given, and the user just shared the page, perhaps the “problem” is implicit: *What are the two uses of apostrophes?*
From the text:
1) In a contraction for the missing letters
2) In possessive nouns to show who or what owns something
So the final answer should be those two points.
Final Answer:
1) In a contraction for the missing letters
2) In possessive nouns to show who or what owns something
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of apostrophe worksheet with answer key.