the shoes belong to the boy
the boy's shoes
27,840
twenty seven thousand eight hundred and forty
4,590
four thousand, five hundred and ninety
I _____ go to the store after school.
have to
She _____ swim four miles.
has to
the house belongs to the family
the family's house
439,250
four hundred thirty-nine thousand two hundred and fifty
24.823
twenty-four thousand, eight hundred and twenty-three
Yesterday, she ______ bring an umbrella because it was raining.
had to
We ______ paint our house when we moved in.
had to
where does the apostrophe go: my dads car was in the garage.
in between the d and s - dad's
1,454,370
one million, four hundred fifty four thousand, three hundred and seventy
5,079,312
five million, seventy-nine thousand, three hundred and twelve
We ______ buy paint for the project we ______ in class today.
had to / have to
She _____ buy the cookies because we _____ buy the ice cream.
has to / have to OR had to
where do the apostrophes go: I thought the book was my brothers, but it was actually my moms.
between the r and s - brother's / between the m and the s - mom's
1,234,567
one million, two hundred thirty-four thousand, five hundred and sixty-seven
64,400,502
sixty-four million, four hundred thousand, five hundred and two
They ______ go to work tomorrow. Yesterday they ______ (negative) because it was a holiday.
have to / didn't have to
I _______ (negative) to go to school on the weekends.
don't have to
where do the apostrophes go: that is my parents car, and the jackets in the back seat are theirs.
450,000 + 630,000
1,080,000 - one million eighty thousand
20,500 + 34,000
Did you ______ go to football after school yesterday?
have to
______ (negative, you) clean your room before leaving the house?
Don't you have to